HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-09-09 - Orange Coast Pilot. . . . . .
SERVING THE NEWPORT-MF.SA CO~UNffiES SINCE 1907
•
. . FARE WE l L T 0 T H E C A N N E R Y
Cannery Restaurants rich
history reca(led as eatery
sets to close up shop
Cannery
owner prepares
for cwsing of the
Newport
landmark;
others praise
his work in
the community
B ill Hamilton knows there is a
• beginning and an end to almost
everything. Endings are always
sad, be figures, whether it is a
funeral, the final chapter of a
good book or leaving a job.
He didn't think this"was going to end
When the great wooden doors shut for
the last time at the Cannery Restaurant on
Sunday, so closes a memorable and good
chunk of Hamilton's career. The 75-year-
old operator of the waterfront restaurant
has been trying to Jet go, but the sentunen-
tal feelings continually wash over him.
•rm trying to prepare myself for the end
of a career,• he said. "For the first time in
my life I won't have a heavy responsibility.•
It's a bittersweet moment for Hamilton,
Has Newport film festival
shown its · final credits?
....
• Many shocked at news that
event showcasing independent
movies went bankrupt.
NoAJO fWART.l . ~,..,.
NEWPORT RUACH -The story of
the Newport J3cach International Film
Festival bankruptcy has all the mekin!J6
of a cinematic mystery It elf. ·
Seemingly successful, after fout
yean of increasing t?nlriP.S and atten-
dance. the annual event's reported
demlle has baffled mony m the city.
"I'm sony to hP.ar about the current
state of affalrl, • said Todd Quartararo,
former publicist for the festival, who Just
heard the news from a Daily ~ot editor.
Jeffrey S Conner, fesUval co-
founder, reportedly . filed" Cha.pte.r 7
bMkniptcy in U.S &nkruptcy Court ln
Santa Ana two weeks ago Conner
could not be reached for comment
Wednesday. •
But the question on everyone' lip
is, "What happened?" .
This March's hlm ntrt total d to
more than 100 out of 550 him from 30
countries. And attendA'nce s\Vellod to
more than 15,000 JJCQplc. Aft r tour
years running, many.believed the event
was on its way to tabli hmg itself as n
major Newport attraction.
However, the f uval did have tt-.
share of . gbtch •s along lhc way.
Celebrities who were !!Cheduled to
appear at film tcroomng often can-
celed at the last minute, overal film·
makers oomplalned of sound and p1c·
ture problems and some Of lh f tiv l'
planned activities fell through
Although some have assumed lhat
the bankruptcy was the simple result of
operating coMI exceeding ptoliti, lt ha
Sil FilJl Mae M
•
BILL HAMILTON
·+Age: 75 + Occupation: Qwner of Cannery Restau·
rant and Malarkey's Pub + Accomplishments (among many):
Helped build Newport Nautical Museum,
founding president of Youth Advisory
Council, invented "water rake• trash-<ol-
lecting boat to clean up harbor, chamber's
Citizen of the Year in 1989, and started
Taste of Newport and Clean Harbor.Day.
who has become an icon in the business
and civic communities. He.stands to earn a
windfall of money from the sale of the prop-
erty to private investors who plan to build
single-family homes on the site.
..
~Pb·.
For many, the demise or the
Cannery means more than
JUSt the end of another
~ beachfront restaurant, but
the loss of a precious link to
city's maritime ·past.
The small porthole to the early
beginnings of this fishing'communi-
ty will close Sunday.
But, in a TQ.Odem community
increasingly populated by extrava-
gant dockside homes, holding on to
the Cdnnery is almost like trying to ..
stop time, said Bill Hamilton, 75, one
of lhe restaurant's primary owners.
Dunng th~ 1930s when the
restaurant was an-acfual fish can-
nery, a 10-year-old Hamilton rowed
his boat to the fdctory, threw rodes at
pigeons and stared fasonated at the
gnndmg machinery that would
churn out can after can of tuna.
The Western Canners Co.
employed a ldrge number of resi-
dents, who o~rated the machinery
by hand and turned out hundreds of
tuna cans daily. Eventually, human
hands were replaced by machinery
and production mcreased into the
thousands.
lrorucally, 1t was Newport's grow-
ing prospenty -which allowed
operations to thnve through the
Depression dnd World War 11-that
was also r<>spon.<;1ble for the closure
SEE CANNERY PAGE A6
SEE HAMILTON PAGE A6 Cannery Restaurant owner Bill Hamilton
MILLENNIUM MOMENT •
Dedicated to helping others
A rden Ramson of Corona dcl Mar created the
Richard J . Flam on I fered1tary Saeening Pro-
gram at Hoag Hos1>ital a fter h r husband died
of leukemia in 1991. The prograin b cl tgn d to
help people who believe thoy may be h red1tarlly at
mk for canocr. Flamson 1s am nber of Circle J6oo,
Sandpipers, Foundation Rf na Ui Fi tivaT of
necs, all of which ra1s funds for th h >p1taJ Her
efforts have helped to general mor than $3 million
for the Canc"r Ct?nl •r dunng U1 l st 12 years.
Fla.m$on is al o the grandmother ol eight.
• • MIUINNIUM ..,_NT celel>r~tes the people who made a mafof contribution to th
Newport·Mes.I community during this century ·
WEATHER INDEX
.,..,.. ,,. Wt ,,,, lifi#.a. GASSlflDS ____ .,..... ..
s..wu•·~,.2 ...._ __ -"".....__
NUCmDm---
SUIY rvn• A11
SNIS-----1
Target plans
to develop old
Fedco site
• Discount retailer ays
it plans to file fonrull ·
· pplication with city soon.
•
locall Olily I t
I Daily Pilot -
Shoes galore step
into South Coast
I melda Marcos clones will like
the new Silver Feet shoe bou-
tique at South Coast Plaza.
After running Fred Segal Peet
on Melrose in Los Angeles for l S
years, Patricia and Stanley Silver
haye opene<J Silver Peet The·
Silver's have built a name for
tltemselves by introduong
undiscovered designers and cut-
ting-edge shoe collections to the
U.S., and they have developed a •
local client list that reads like a
Hollywood who's who, from
Kevin Costner to Celine Dion, to
Barbra Streisand and Bette
Midler. The 2000-square-foot
South Coast Plaza store carries a
collect1on of cutting-edge
footwear and accessories, and
features over 600 shoe styles for
men, women and children.
For the Qest buy in town on
Reyn Spooner shirts, stop by
Atkinson's Men's Clolhtng for its
endless summer sale. Reyn -
Spooner shirts are reduced to
$42.50 through Sept. 18. Atkin-
son's carries top quality men's
dothlng and accessories. It's at
3430 Via Lido in Newport Beach.
IEST IUYS
• WOlllll
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A Best Buy on a fund-raiser to
benefit the HomeAld chapters of
Orange County and greater Los
AngelesNentura is a $5 general
admission Playhouse Tour Tick-
et, or a ticket to the Auction Par-
ty. $20 for adults'and $5 for thil-
dmn 12 and under The .Pro1ect
Playhouse bwlder teams have
ments -such as a five different
facials, antiaging treatments, eye
lifting treatment, fadal peels,
body care salt glow, antistress
back treatment, body wrap, and
a full body massage. Other ser-
vices available are eye lash and
brow tinting, wcpdng, manicures,
pedicures and makeup applica -
tions. Making Faces gives a free
treatment with the purchase in
advance of six treatments. You
only pay for five. The offer
excludes the PowerPeel treat-
ment. Gift packages are also dis-
counted 10% to 15% and those
include the classic day of beauty
at $130, the executive stres!i
relief at $160, and the. royal
treatment at $220. Making Faces
is at 747 Dover St. in Newport
Beach. It's open Tuesday
' Food service elnployee keeps students' belli~s full
built a village of full-size, elabo-
rate duldren's playhouses that wru be on public display at
Fa,<;hion Island from Sept. 17 to
Oct. 16 The 14 bwlder teams
include'Cap1tal Paofic Holdings
Inc.; Gnfhn lndustne!.; Neiman
Marcus Wllh Tony Valentine
Cpnstruction; Newport Beach
Fire Fighter!>, Osborne Develop-
ment; Pardee Homes; Presley
Home of Southern California;
T~lor Woodrow l lomes; Terry
Lamber Construction; The
RM:hard Crawford Co.; Thmark
Pc¥:iftc Homes; William Lyon
~mes; WMC Development
Ll.C; and Xbalanque Corp. Each
playhouse will be sold to the
highest bidder at the aucbon
through Saturday.
The Susan G. Komen Race for
the Cure is scheduled for Sept.
26 at Fashion Island in Newport
Beach. You can save $5 on regis-
tration fees by preregistering
before Sept. 18. There are walk-
in registration statioM set up
from Friday to Sept. 21 at the
New Balance store at Corona del
Mar Plaza and at the Fashion
Island concierge fiesk. The pre-
registration fees are $25 for
adults, and youth .and senio~
$15. Registration on the race day
begins at 6:30 a.m. The family
one mile fun run/walk starts at
7:30 a .m .. the women's SK
run/walk starts at 7:50 a.m .. the
coed SK run starts at 9:40 a.m.,
and the coed SK walk starts at
9:45 a.m. The event starts anCI
finishes at Pacific Life, 700 New-
port Center. Drive in Newport
Beach. For more infonnation,
please call (714) 957-9165.
HE IS
Your back-to-school source
for mystery meat, and other
cafeteria delectables.
HE'S HEARD 'OiAT ONE BEFORE
Probert, bimseU a graduate of
Costa Mesa High School, has
worked for the school district's
food service department for the
last 25 years. He says he's heard
every joke you can think of
about cafeteria food, but he
doesn 't le t it get to him.
"I've heard plenty of 'em," he
said. "The one I hear the most is
mystery meat. I find it funny. I
laugh inside, because I think,
well, it's a good point.
"It's a school district/ he
added. •0ur lunches are inex-
pensive, and we try to keep the
prices down."
O n the other band, said
ProQert, he and the rest of his
hard:working staff resent_ the
idea that the meals they work so
hard to prepare and serve is
inedible or somehow mysterious.
"Every product we use is a
brand-name product,• he said.
And staff members try to make
sure· it is both delicious and
nutritioils.
NO suesmuno~s .
Each day, the district serves
9,000 lunches and 3,SOO meals,
as well as countless thousands of
school-rnade c;:ookies, making it
one of the lar.gest restaurants
a.round. .
And Probert, who oversees
everything ftom the district's
popcorn machlnes to its mam-
moth food warehouse to opera-
tions at all secondary schools,
stressed that he does believe
that he and his staff are in the
restaurant business.
"We have to be in touch with
our customer -and that's the
kids,• he Sclld
So Probert spends a few days
.
each semester meeting with stu-
dent government leaders, feed-
ing them bites of pizza or tastes
of burritos that the district is con-
sidering selling in its cafeterias.
•we have to talk about what
they don't like and con:ect it,• he
said. •0ur business is the kids."
IT'S IN THE FAMILY
Probert, who originally pur-
sued a career as a draftsman and
then entered the food · service
business because be wanted to
work with· people, grew up in
the restaurant business.
"My mom and dad owned
restaurants,• he said. So his own
foray into cafeterias •seemed
like a natural progression."
When he started in food ser-
vice more than 2S years ago, it
was a different world, he said.
•It was like a bunch of moms
working in food service, and I
was theu son," he said. •And
now lt's changed. But it's just a
great job, and the people are
great, and that's why I took the
job."
EVERY DAY IS DIFFERENT
Probert, who reports to the
district's director of food ser-
vices, Richard Green, said it
sometimes feels like he bas 20
jobs instead of just one.
Some days he's in the office
filling out application for free
and reduced lunches for poor
children.
Other days, he goes out to the
warehouse to make sure the dis-
trict has enough staples like
·flour for cookie dough and cat-
sup for hamburgers. And still
other days, he visits schools to
help resolve any food service
problems.
But despite the age-old jokes
about the food, Probert still
maintains that "my favorite part
of my job is working with the
kids."
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J>41ty, set for Oct. 16 dt Fastuon
ls~d. Tickets include admission
to the auction, dinner, fdnuJy,
entertainment and a gwded tour
oflhe playhouses on a weekend
d('r'. HomeAld Orange County IS
celebrating its 10th anniversary
of:Owlding and renovating shel-
teis for the temporarily home-
le$5. For more infonnation on
Project Playhouse, please con-
ta!=t HomeAid at (949) 553-9Sl0.
For the first time ever, the
Orange County Fairgrounds will
have a Craft & Sewing Festival
horn 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. beginning
today through Saturday. The
Thursday Morning Oub turns 39 today .. ~ .... ....
.Don McLean is in concert at 8
p.Jti. Saturday at OCC in the
R~rt B. Moore Theater.
f'vicLean ruts include • American PW " and MVmcent (Starry
Ntght). • Tickets are $33 m
a¢.'ance, $29 for seniors and
dpldren, and $37 at the door.
The Robert B. Moore Theater is
at.Arlington and Fairview in
C6sta Mesa.
Making Paces, at (949) 646-
S009, is a slon care salon that
otta.rs head-to-toe skin treat-
·price for admission is $7, which
gets you in every day of the !es-
tival. The event will feature the
latest in supplies, fabrics, pattern
and tools for making crafts, nee-
dle-arts, quilts and sewing.
There also will be seminars,
make-and-take workshops and
demonstration staJ:ions. for more
mformation, please call 1-800-
96CRAFT. .
• BEST BUYS is published Thursdays
and Saturdays. If you know of a good buy. send a fax to (949) 646-4170 or
wnte to Daily Pilot. Best Buys. 330 W.
Bay St., Costa Mesa 92627
•Newport-Mesa women's
group celebrates· nearly
four decades of fund-raising
and community involvement
AMY R. 5PuRcEON °" rrnes
NEWPORT BEACH -Back in
September 1960, the wife of a
retired Corona del Mar doctor
decided to form a ladies club that
promoted friendliness and com-
munity involvement. Florine Rop-
er called her club the Thursday
Moqung Club -for the day and
time the ladies would meet.
"We are a bunch of women
who just like to be friendly and
have a positive attitude about
things," said member Marilyn
Reich, 74, of Costa Mesa. "Every
city should P.ave a women's club."
Members will meet today at
the Balboa Bay Club to celebrate
the club's 39th birthday. Women
of all ages will gather in the main
ballroom to en1oy lunch and a
fashion show: _.
The club, which has held
monthly luncheons at the Bay
Club for most of four decades,
includes groups that focus on
traveling, golfing, walking, stitch-
ery and bridge. The club also rais-
es f\lnds for local charities such as
Costa Mesa's Share Our Selves
and Women Helping Women.
They also put out a monthly
newsletter called "The Clarion.•
But Reich womes that the non-
profit organization is facing a
decline in membership. In its hey-
day the group boosted 600 mem-
bers.
"I don't know if the younger
gals are finding other things to do
or if they are working,• Reich
said. But the tradition of daugh-
ters jollling their mothers' club
has stopped in the last 10 years, ·)
she said. '
Reich said the club tries to
keep its members challenged by ,
encouraging involvement with
community activities. She said the
group hopes to hold a fund-raiser •
and holiday party this year. • The club is mostly fo r women 11 living in Newport-M esa, though '
anyone in Orange County can I
joln. The club's monthly ente.r-'
tain.ment luncheons are held on :
the second Thursday of the ;
month at the Balboa Bay Club.
For more information, call (714) 1 546-2244 -. , . :~ -=--~~~~~~~~~~~-.C-O_S_T_A ___ M_E_S_l __ C __ IT-Y---C-O_U_N __ C_l_l_W __ R_l_.-p-.-U-P~.~~~~~~~~~~~~.i
• JSSUE: Signs of Support program
• 1'CTION: Approved 5 to 0
• SUMMARY: The council unani-
mously approved the Signs of
S~pport program, which places
abvertising on non-public safety
qty vehicles to raise money for
designated causes. Under the
}'.)l'ogram, city businesses may
p\lrchase an advertisement with
t.lle city seal and a message of
s~pport that would be placed on
the back of a aty vehicle. The city
receives 50% of the proceeds. It lS
estimated that by using 12 of the
oty's vehicles for advertising, the
city will raise about $43,000 a
year.
• ISSUE: Designate the proceeds
from the Signs of Support pro-
gram for the arts
• ACTION: Approved 3 to 2, with
Mayor Gary Monahan and
Councilman Joe Erickson voting
no.
• SUMMARY: Staff recommended
the council consider setting aside
proceeds from the Signs of Sup-
port program to youth recreation
and/or the arts. Co\lncilwoman
Libby Cowan advocated for the
money to go solely to the arts.
She said that because $43,000
was such a small amount of mon-
ey it was better not to split it up
between two causes. Also, Cow-
an argued, there is no money set
aside in the city's budget for the
arts despite the fact that promot-
ing the arts has been identified as
a community objective.
• ISSUE: Allow nighttime con-
struction of South Coast Plaza
bridge over Bear Street for a max-
imum of 14 days
• ACTION: Approved 5 to 0.
• SUMMARY: When construction
of the Bear Street bridge !Wdng
the two halves of South Coast
Plaza was approved in J anuary,
nighttime construction was pro-
hibited. But because of unfore-
seen delays and other time con-
straints, C.J. Segerstrom & Sons
has requested that nighttime con-
struction be allowed. The devel-
oper estimates that nighttime
work will be limited to about sev-
en nights over the next seven
months.
• ISSUE: ReVISion of landscape,
streetscape and median develop-
' • ment standards. ·"
• ACTION: Approved S to 0 ;
• SUMMARY: An ad-hoc comm.it-'
tee has worked for five months to I
clarify landscape, streetscape and ~
rn~dian develqpment standards. ''
The effort was spearheaded b y • -
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, ~
who saw the need to daiify the •'
standards. The changes include • J
designated trees for streets and •!
pnvale property. '!
-EUse Gee • ·1 ,, REAPERS HODJNE Of adwrtlsemenb herein c.1n be WEA1Hll SURF • reprocflJ(ed without written pet· . ·POLICE FILES .. (949) 642-6086 • Record your comments about mlmon of copynght cwn«
" It the 0.1ly Pilot°' news t•ps. -HOW TO REACH US • • ADDRESS • VOL 93, NO. 211 arw&.tion ~ our eddrts is 330 w. e.y St . ~Times Or•~ County c;osta Mesa, CA 92627. (800) 252·9141
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NANCY C>8'VM. County ( 2521t•t.1n ... ~llrllrfltl~~ outsktt of~ IMch iind fNtlKes Editor eon. ~ subkrlptiom to h • TlmM Mrror ~. ..,.
• ROG9' CAM.SON. . ~ llllot •• ...,.lllble only by _ ........ ... 5POtU Editor fot s 10 I* mOnch S«Otld Editof 14111'1 OllllNCL dMl~.t COIU~ StlW ..... ~~ CA. ill aippll(tblt Mriglng Edltof ~ at1d ioc.t tues.) POSlMAS--~ LAMDl80N. m.s..t~~toTht DlreQor GfflhotlC9.Pit Promotlol• Ntwport IMcht'Oltl ~
fl'lloC. "o 1oa 1 MO. C011ta ~ ............ ............
CA tlGI == new1 _.
Senior ldllor. ~ 09 aw Arw1cS11 Offktr rift,,~ CNlft9' ....... °' .... --..
TIMPERATURES Fimlow
blbOa 3:41 a.m .•.•••. ...0.3
11161 Fimhigh
Corona del Mar 9.56 a.m ......... S.1
81161 Second low
Costa Mesa 3.37 p.m •••.•••• 1.1
84161 Second high
Newport Beach
82161
941 p.m .• , .•••• 5.9
Newport Coast AllDAY 81161 First low
4:13 a.m ........ 0.1 ~POMCAST
LOCATION SIZE First high
10·26 a.m ....... 5.1 'N9dge. , , , , , 2 ... SW
Newport • ., • 2 .... SW• S«ond low
llfdllt$ ••••• 2.-4 sw 4. 16 p.m .••••••• 1.0
Second high ltt\Mr ~ •••• 2-4JW
1 O:)O p.m ••••••• s.' ~ •••.••• 2-4M
,_ ...
~ ---=·
Expect sunny sk~
today. changing to . partly cloudy tondl~
lions by Fric:t.y A
bUilding southwest
sMll will deliver 5eU
In the waist high -zone. Sets will be
hlgheSt In Hunting-
ton Beach.' The best
spots, Including
points end r.efs. wUI
'" shouldlt.ih~
MU. Wilt« condf-
tJons Ind ¥hlbllfty
.. fM Thi sun wUI
Mt mt 7.14 p.m •
COSTA MESA
• W-.t ... .,. Sv..t: A wallet and ltS contents worth
$230.were stolen from a car in tbe 1100 block et 2:35 p.m.
Aug.26.
• hlrvlew 9'oed: Several bottles of medicetion wonh
S100 were stolen from a car in the 2700 block at 12:30
p.m. Aug. 28.
. • ,..,... ..... RoM: A b~le worth S200 was stolen In the
2600 block between 2:30 and 6 p.m. Aug. 29.
• HMt1or loUlevwd: Four tires and their rims worth
$1,600 were stolen from a store durln·g the evening of
Aug. 20.
• Newport loulev..-.t. Several lterm of jewelry worth
S1,590 were stolen from acer In the 2~ block during
the d.-y of Aug. JO.
NEWPORT IEAOt
• Mlnll ,,.. ~ A purse and tts contents wottPI S 169
w.e stOlen from • h0te1 In the 1100 block ff14aY night.
• Mllrt llrwt: A reer llCenM pi.te'WOrth S10 wesstolen
from a CM In the 100 blodc It t 1 am.~.
• -dl1 .. Court: A ..t of blank checks wet9 stolen
from • Mallbalc In the first block bltwt1n-Aug. 1 .nd
Aug. 21.,
., ... ..
:j
-~
"
P e El Toro airport beat goe£
on. And on. And on.
Laurel and Hardy. Abbott
and Costello. Cheec.h and Chong.
Laurel runs a sound test; Hardy
calls it a joke on the one hand
and says it proves unacceptable
noise on the other. Abbott comes
up with a skin game called the
Sate and Healthy Communines
Initiative; Costello responds by
trying to out-con the skin game
with a counter initiative. Cheech
ponies up 150 grand to push for
the airport; Chong kicks in
$350,000, to kill it. Or $6 million.
Or $11 million, d~pending on
whose figures you accept. And so
it goes.
Next performance tomorrow.
Watch the newwapers for time
and place. .
The only ~pie making out in
this miasma of confusion and
rhetoric are ijle political flacks
who will go either way for the
bucks. And since the biggest
bucks appear to be m South
County at the moment, the flack
consultants who previously
pushed the pro-airport position
are now demonstrating a remark·
ably open mind by selling out to
the other side.
All this reminds me of a con-
versation I once had with Bill
·Roberts who -along with Stuart
Spencer -directed an actor
named Ronald Reagan in his
campaign to win the role of gov-
ernor of California. Spencer-
Roberts had also managed Cali-
fornia campaigns for the liberal
Nelson Rockefeller and the John
Birch Sooety Congressman John
Rousselot When I asked Roberts
how he could, l1l good con-
science, work for candidates with
such disparate philosophies as
Rockefeller and Rousselot. he
said: ·we don't hyphenate
Republicans. We ask only two
things of a candidate we deode
to handJe: Le; he a Republican and
does he have a chance to win?
We don't judge him any further
than that• •
I don't know if the turncoat
consultants hired by the city ot
Irvine are motivated by the
prospect of living under a poten-
tial El Toro llight path What 1 do
know is that I live under the John
Wayne Oight path, and that leads
me -byway oT some rather
·obVious reasoning -to several
conclusions that I offer free of
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I I
1 OIL & FILTER1
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ANY REPAIR:
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l:.xr •mo199 ~ i
M111t prCJCnt ~0111><.m. -------Pacific Auto Tcchni cs Inc.
J 786 Whittier Ave.
Costa Me!a
942i::li:t:=::~~:i1
THE llLL CUIYE
conviction. If you doubt that, con-
tjder for a moment that probably
no other issue m human history
could have brought I,.arry Agran
and Christina Shea together.
(
strength: our old fn nd, Sale antl
Healthy.
Defeating this 11Utiative would
· effectJvely break the back of
organized oppos1bon to the El
Toro airport. There wolild proba-
bly be years of rear guard legal
actions, but the heart would be
cut from the opposition. They
have mdnaged to talk their way
out of two elections, but u third
would be fatal -and they've set
themselves up.
• Teen accidentall~ ran
over brother while fleeing
crime scene in truck.
~Pilot
Thursday, September 9, 1999 A 3
older lJrother, 17, tried to 1ump out
of the bed of the truck and run ·
dway, but fell to the ground.
The right ·rear wheel of the
truck ran over the 17-year-old'•
head, causmg major mjuries. Thei
other two boys ran away an,d hav.e.,
not been identified by police.
The older brother remains in
critical cond.Jtion at Western Med·
1cal Center in Santa Ana.
Second, a counter ini~tive to
that wonderfully christened Safe
and Healthy Communities lnitia-
bve is a terrible idea. Floating this
suggestion hcts already achieved
about all that can be expected of
ll: stimulating the whining com-
ing out of Irvine, where the coun-
tel)lrOposal, according to the Los
Angeles Times, has been "deeply
resented• and called "manipula-
tive trickery". -apparently in
contrast to that Safe and Healthy
paragon of public policy virtue
Finding the votes to britig Uus
off sho~d be concentratf.'<l where.
efforts are most likely to be effec.
tive: in areas where noise from
the planes is not a factor. Trying
to placate South CounlidJlS 1l;
counterproductive. But residents
COSTA MESA -The Police
Department will hand over tts
mvestigation today involving an
acc1denf this ~st weekend•that
saw a 15-year-oid dnver acciden-
tillly run over lus older brother
after allegedly stealing some c0m-•
pact discs at a Wherebouse music
store.
There are several directions the
distnct attorneys office can take·. •
,with the case: 1) file the-case as a
rrusdemeanor petty theft with the
traffic accident 2) depending on
the suspects' type of mtent,
charges could be filed as felony
burglary 3) if the V1ctun doesn't
sUTVlve, felony m\lrder charges.
charge to both sides in this tire-
some debate. .
• First of all, no one directly
·affected by aircraft noise is going
to compromise this issue. If 100
additional Oights at John Wayne
were proposed, I would fight like
hell against them. And I would
have no more interest in compro-
mising at 50 or even 25 than the
people who would be subjected
to El Toro noise are going to com-.
promise.
It makes no difference to them
that I live a few hundred yards off
the John Wayne runway while
they would be five miles or more
distant from El Toro, and are thus
far less subject to noise. They dTe
programmed to believe that the
noise would be intolerable, and
they aren't going to moderate that
It's time that we JUSt accept the
fact that they got the jump on us
in the shell game -and not try to
beat them at the.tr own game.
Larry Agran told a Tunes
reporter that it was his "gut feel-
mg" that a counter initiative
•would backfire." It's the first
time I've agreed with Agran since
the Marines decided to retreat
from El Toro.
Third, and finally, scattering
funds, energy and focus some-
times wins an occasional battle
but assuredly.doesn't win wars.
Proponents of a coi;ru:nercial air-
port at El Toro need to select the
most vulnerable spot in th~e
my lines and concentrate
resources there. And I believe
that vulnerable place to be what
. they regard $15 their greatest
ABOUT 15 MINUTES
FROM FASHION ISLAND
-of central and north Orange
County would be rec«:!pllve to the
strong argwnehts -mostly eco-
nomic -.that urge an El Toro air-
port.
So why don't we knock off the
blather. Let Wilson and Spitzer
have thelf photo ops With the
petitioners and Agran and Shea
bleed for the helpless VlCtims of
corporate greed. If the consultants
Newport Beach has hired hdven't
made the above arg\.lments force-
fully, they sl'tould be fired. And lf
I'm not asked to be general mdJl-
ager of the A.n'gels, l'U be dvdil· ·
able -for 150 grand, of cowse.
• JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana
Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
The Orange County district
attorney'!> office will take over the
case. but without any recomrnen-
dabon from the police about how
to proceed. The department has
the option to make such a recom-
mendation but deeded against it.
said Lt. Ron Srruth.
"We presented just the facts
about what, if any, legal area
applies," he said. •Tuey ID.A's
office) will make the call."
Police have gingerly
approached the case because of
its tragic circumstances. Police
srud a group of four boys grabbed
d handful of compact discs Satur-
day night at the music store and
sped away in a truck. Moments
later at a nearby parking lot, thP
'15-year-old driver ~lowed the
· truck. before speeding away. His
While the latter seems extreme,
1t 1s wtthin the realm of the law.
But some law enforcement offi-
cials don't agree that would be the
best solution.
"I think it would be stretching
the intent of the law,• said Lt.
John F1t2Patnck. •Personally, I
tlunk it's a sad event. and we
would be erring on the side of
compassion .if the boy ,was ~
charged with murder.•
The victun was a former stu-
dent at Costa Mesa High School
according to Pnncipal Andy Her-
nandez, who remembers working
j
with the teen.
"I'm very disappointed to hear
that tlus happened,· he said.
Beacon Bay Auto
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833-0660
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Bring in Kayaks Dollar$!
EXp. 9/15
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Take tile guessworil out of choosing colleges
At Achieva, we understand th•H 'orung throu~h more than 4,000 US colleg~:s from Dulce to Cal pl,ly can
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./ C991r the SAT I and PSAT
With small cltt ~~. flex1hle --c hcdulc onJ wp qual1t)' in.,tmctors, Achtc\.'a tudcnt typ1 llf dom1n h: th
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.i W.Hfj llt•esti!g extracwri<llar opportllitits
·College~ crtrc a hoot so mu h more than JU t grad nnd tc't ores. t Ach1t'\'8 we help tud m d \cl
their extracum1;ular . lfl\'lll(' mc:lu<l1ng set\tCC.. ut}lm r mtcm h11 ana I
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..
'A 4 Thundoy, September 9, 1999 .. Doily Pilot
Samqa house owner may sue city
'
•Officials maintain their
position r~voking building
permits for the
controversial remodelirtg
in Mesa Verde.
Eu.<;E Grn
!kif Pb
MESA VERDE -An attorney
representing the owner of a
large, controversial home being
.remodeled on Samoa Place told
the Oty Counol on Tuesday her
-client might have no choice but
to take the oty to court.
Jenrufet Pnend of Wellman
and Warren. LLP, spoke on behalf
of Jracy Stevenson, whose Mesa
Verde home was being dlscussed
by the council ln the end,
Friend's statement that Steven-
son might be forced to sue the
aty did not deter the council from
voting 5 to 0 to pass a resolution
supporting their earlier decision
against Stevenson and then vot-
ing 5 to 0 not to grant Stevenson
a reheanng on a setback issue.
In the last few months, the
City Council and Planning Com-
mission have determined that
Stevenson's rem9deled home has
a third story and is therefore pro-
hibited They also determin~d
that the house violates the
required setback, forcing the
removal of a stairwell.
However, these deterrruna-
tions were made after most of the
framing of the house was com-
pleted and after building pennits,
which were issued in error, were
revoked.
"Basically, it sends a scary
message to homeowners who
want to remodel in Costa Mesa ...
that th~y can't have a good faith
reliance on the issuance of build-
ing pennits, • Friend said.
It has been more than 10
months since Stevenson tore
down two-thirds of her home t°?
start the remodeling proj~.· S~,
far, she and her boyfriend Joseph
Warner have invested about
$100,000 in the project, Friend
said.
Discussions between Steven·
son and the dty have been ongo-
ing. Several attempts have been
made to reach an acceptable
compronhse but to no avail.
Resident Robin Lefler, who
has helped organize a coalition of
neighbors who oppose the
remodeling, said the issue is not
about style but about zoning
codes.
Friend argued that the time to
raise those issues passed after
building permits were issued.
Some have speculated that
because the city has admitted to
making d mistake that they
might have trouble defending
~~·
Plumbing, Heating
& Air Conditioning
Celebrating 45 years. of
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themselves m court. But that's not
nec~sarily the case, said City
Attorney Jerry Scheer.
"There is the allo.wance in the
legal system for errors to be
made,• Scheer said. "It happens.
The question remains whether
the interest of the community
outweighs the interest of the
prop~ owner.•
There have been numerous
cases across the state and country
where courts have upheld errors·
on the part of cities but eatjl case
is determined individually, be
added. . .
But Friend contends that case
law is on the side of Stevenson.
Fnend herself said she won a set-
tlement that included damages
from the city of Anaheim in a
surular case this year.
She said a whole slew of state
and federal cases support a prop·
erty ownet's vested right to com-
plete remodeling as approved by
cities and that those approvals
cannot be revoked once the right
is granted. ..._ ·
Still, both Stevenson and city
official:> said they hope the matter
can be resolved outside of court.
• • ~ LEACH I DAILY PILOT
"That they might be willing to
talk about some possible solu-
tions doesn't dilute the fact that
there are constitutionally guaran-
teed property rights,• Friend
said.
The owner of this house on Samoa Place is at odds with city ofticlals over the size oftuie home and
other Issues.
. ...
~CRYSTAL CAVE
Costa ,\ ks~1 Lt Kat ion On I\'.
~e
l)aroers ...._____.,
HAIRCUT
SJ .D . SEPTEMBER
CA.LEND AK
lln'UN!OIATE ASTAOLOOY
wlUI PATTY
Thws ~pt. 10. 2.Hlr 30
? to 9 pm· t20 pu da9 or $8~ lor ~ncs
lllAOl'IET W()MSHOr
~IUI AYl'IM LOllLSL
Sat. Sept. I I
Noon~o4pm-$1~
.6TROLOOY WOllKSHOr
wllll ""'" KAVr.A.SootU' s.n .. Sept. 18
COmblnlng Vedic Ile Western A$tTOloQY
• Metaphyslcal 6ooks
• Original Jewelry. 011\s. Artwork
• Minerals ~ Oemstones
• Hand-Olrved CtystaJ Quan Yin ~ Buddha
• Herbs. r.ssenuar Oils. Incense
Professional
Haircutting by
the World's
Best Barbers! I
Costa Mesa
HAIRCUT
SENIORS
s.6.".
891 Baker Street A 16 • Costa Mesa
(at Wllson-K-Mart Plaza)
2200 Harbor Bl.
(949) 631-9654
Fountain Valley
(t.;omer of Magnolia & Warner)
1 7036 Magnolia
(714) 847-9555
..
,
The Wo'rld's Premi~r Electric Boat Builder
949.645.6812
·Factory Showroom: 20.01 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Bef!,ch
"Come visit us at our new website at
www.duffyboats:com"
.,
l
. . . .
~Doily Pilot
·S~hool officials expect
smoOth ride on ·first .day
<'
• Some parents are
concerned about traffic
around Eastbluff and
Davis el.ementary schools. ..
JESSICA GARRISON
NEWPORT-MESA -Even
before the school year officially
"'' begins this morrung, some neigh-
bors near the newly opened East-
blulf Elementary School are
already rumbling about traffic ·
~ongestion.
• 1 Across town, parents at Davis
• 1 Elementary School worry that
their school, which. has limited
, parking in the school lot and no
, parking on adjacent streets, is
: difficult to access.
At Andersen Elementary
I School last spring, parents voiced
. concerns about the increasingly
, , crowded parking lot around that
1 i;chool. "'
• But despite these ongoing 1 toncems, school and city officials
• said they are certain that traffic"
today, the first day of school, will
• Al this point,
we thilk it'$
going to be OK,
but it's rdy
hard to tel Until,
after the fiit
week of
sthool:
• Ed Hayes
Newport·
Mesa's Head
of facilities
flow smooth-
ly .
"At this
point, we
thick it's
going to be
OK, but ,it's
really hard to
tell until after
the first week
of school,"
said ~ Ed
Hayes. New ..
port-Mesa's
head of fdcili-
ties. l
Jn East-
bluff, traffic
problems in the neighborhoods
surrounding the new elementary
school and Corona del Mar High
were part of what prompted the
city to permanently install
restrictions at the intersection of
Bison and ·Jamboree roads. But
motorists' ir)ability to cross Jam-
boree on Bison or turn left onto
Bison from northbound Jam·
boree has residents concerned
about more problems on other
streets.
Hayes said school and city
Lifetime Sta~n Wartanty
Lifetime Seil Warranty
Lifetime Fade Warranty
lifetime Matt Warr1nty
Lifetime lnttall1ti1n
omdals were particlllarly con-
cerned about traffic crunches at
Eastblulf and Davis, but that they
would address any problems that
arose today.
H Poop le should allow extra
ti,me to get to school the first tew
we-eks, ". he said . ''Especially
because everyone likes to bring
their kids to school the first few
weeks." .._
Costa Mesa Police Sgt. Marty
Carver, who is in charge of traffic
m Costa Mesa today, said he
does not anticipate any prob:
lems.
The city·plans to post 15 cross-
ing guards around the cit'y, but so
far only 12 have been hued.
Police also will be on the look-
out for cars that do not stop for
school buses, h~ said.
More than 2,600 students talce
school buses to school each day,
said Nancy Malone, the district's
director of transportation.
And f r reasons the police do
not unde d, motorists commit
more school bus violallons· near
Paularino Elementary School
than anywhere else in the city,
Carver said.
ORANGE' COUNTY'S EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTOR
OF LIFETIME CARPET
FREE ARMSTRONG CERAMIC TILES FREE
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Co~TA MUA, CA ,ZQ7
1
__. __
•s" 1t1t• fer ••tellt • IHtelletl•• Aflllle~I•
, . . , , ,
Thur~doy, Sepiembet 9, 1999 It 5
F ounda1ion relying on a:uthors ·
• Group trying to build
a n ce ntral library in
Costa Mesa to b egin
fund-raising efforts.
(Ufrnn
• COSTA MESA ~The Costo
Mesa Library Foundation hopes
to raise $4,000 from an author
series, which boasts dn evening
with Ray Bradbury.
m ·
+ T. Jefferson Parker
will read at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday In the Cos-
ta Mesa Senior Center.
Ray Bradbury will read
Oct. 13 and JoAnn
Mapson will read Nov. ·
17 _ Reservations for . the complete series are The series, called • Auth6rl
Author! ff is the fiISt maJOr orga-
nized fund•raiset by the library
foundation. Although the lund-DON LEACH I DAI v Pl.OT
raiser will raise only a mere frac-Ray Bradbury is among
~40 per'"person. Single
sessions are S l 5. For
more information, call
(949) 650-4846. tion or the estimated $15 milhon au thors who will participate.
needed to build a new central in a fund-raiser for Costa
library, orgaruzers are focusmg Mesa Library Pouddation.
on generating interest and sup-needs assessment far the pro·
port for their cause, said foundd-1ect. However, city staff is still
tion President Sandy Genis. features presentab.Pns by Ray dehmng the scope of that study.
The foundation envisions d Bradbury, T. Jefferson Parker and 1t has not gone out to bid
70,000-square-fooJ. library that and JoAnn Ma~on. The ftrsl yet, Gems said.
would house more than 150,000 presentation will be held at 7:30 The hope 1s to build a library
books and include a computer p.m. Wednesday in the Costa rn 10 to 15 years, Genis said. In
center, resource center, meetmg M~sa Senior Center. terms of fund-raismg, Genis sald
rooms and other amenities. \., "We're all people who enJOY once the foundallon reaches the
"HopefuUy. it will give us~ redding and we· want to share s1x-hgure mark, it will be easier
good start on our fund-raising that with other people," Genis to secure grants and larger pri·
and raise the tlwareness and said vale donauons.
interest of our community,• Sdld The foundation is in the very "To gel sizable grants you
Margy Johnston, board m~m-beginnmg stages or planning have to demonstrate that you're
ber. I the library. The City Council set already doing something," she
The "Author! Author!" scnes aside $45,000 in February for a I said.
SJbatino Tommy Peter Phil Vince
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25 1 Shipyard Way • "le\\ port Beach
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Costa Mesa, 92627
Phone 949/631-4404
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Phone 949/673-0330
Black
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98~.
Seafood Dept.
Fresh Atlantic
Salmon Fillet
$699 lb.
Re . S) 0.99 lb. Irvine Ranc:h only.
•
.. ..
_of the ongmal cannery. •
· The booming industr:ialiZa·
tion. and resulting pollution
made the water near the can·
nery uninhabitable for the fish
it depended on. In the sum·
mer of 1966) the cannery
closed and was tom down by
OWQer Bob Unger. ·
Five years later, a group of
World War 11 veterans who
had started a successful chem-
ical business found them·.
selves ill the . unique posillon
of being able to buy back a
piece of their childhood. ~
~(Wally) Burgess and (Bill)
Donavan were approached by
Bob about the cannery prop-
erty and they ap.eroached
Jack Hogan," said John
Hogan, Jack's son Bill Hamil-
ton, Frank Arpaia dnd Tom
Donovan qUickly 1omed the
group. While f lamilton and
Hogan were the primdry
financial backers, the othef·
four each owned 10°10 of the
site.
"They were really sharp
guys -all of them," I logan
said.
Recognizing the success of
Cannery Row in Monterey,
Calif .. the new owners hired d
local architect to design a
bUiJding slightly smdller b.ut
nearly identical to the origindl
factory. After it WdS butlt, they
hued dn interior decorator,
who collected original can-
nery mdchinery and pldced
them around the restaurant
The Cannery ofhcially
reopened as d restaurant m
I '
1973.
While the community
poured into the new restau-
rant almost immediately, it
wasn't exactly smooth sailmg.
·sverything broke,• John
Hogan remembered. "lt took
a year or so to get the bugs
.out.•
Moreover, just a year after
the restaurant opened, Jack
Hogan died. It was at about
this lime that Hamilton went
beyond his role as a financ1al
backer and decided to man-
age the restaurant ..
Despite tHese initial dilfi-
culties, though, thN.ively bar
and restaurant became a
favonte establislunen\: in the
seaside community over the
next 26 years.
Mary Cupp, a regular cus-
tomer, said she remembers
coming to the Cannery for her
40th birthday for the brunch
cruises to meet frienos at hap-
py hour for a free bowl ot
chowder and to see the
Chnstmas village and deco-
rated boilers in the winter.
"This Jis) a piece of local
history that is going to be lost
m a lot of stucco and neutral
tones," said C upp, over one of
her last Cannery meals. "lt's a
IJtUe comer of Newport Beach
where there was a connection
to the .working port."
. As for Hamilton, he is con-
soling himself with the knowl-
edge that for a moment. he
had a hand in keeping that
piece of history alive.
It's hard to face the end of
something you really like fbut
I've) got to be realistk -I'm
not a young kid anymore,• he
said.
.. --
..
HAMILTON
CONTINUED FROM 1.1
.>
Hamilton said the closing has
nothing to do Wlth money. He
would rather keep the restaurant
open and serve plates of seafood
and steak to his loyal patrons.
Come Sunday, Hamilton will
retire for a second time and he
doesn't know how he ~ react.
It won't be pretty, he thinks,
but he'll manage.
I le will kick up his feet and
have a good, stiff drink with
some of his employees.
"The Cannery is like a borne
to me," he remarked as he sits in
the restaurdilt's upstairs lounge.
•rve spent more time here than J.
did at home. It's like losing a part
of my family. It's· not going to be easy.• ·
If Hamilton's ties to Newport
Beach have been e.onsidered
strong, his relationship with the
cannery is iron·clad. As a child
he used to run through the streets
and marvel at the tin-roof bUiJd-
ing. He'd watch workers pack-
age seafood while he played with
his friends. He never imagine
one day be could own that very
property.
Fast torward to 1973 when the
cannery's owners deciCied to sell
the building. Hamilton, retired
from an engineering job in
Chkago, st~ps forward with
some friends and b.uys the prop-
erty.
Hamilton converted the build-
ing into a restaurant and kept its
charm. The customers came caJJ-
mg, pnd the bUilding's rebirth
was a success.
In these Tast days or the restau-
rant, Hamilton's level of percep-
tion has sharpened. He notices
more and finds little treasurE!s.
Last week. he saw a few hand-
Brides,
Appointments Now
Being Taken for Our
Autumn· Winter
Wedding Collection
WAREHOlJSE
New Sliipmeirts of
Glass and
Porcelain Vases, .
Plus 99¢
Merchandise
Arrivillg Daily 1,h<' Fir.fit. The Origi11al. 1"he /Jt> . .,I ...... --~~~~~~~ ·THIS WEEK'S SPEC.IAiS ·A Sense of Autumn [
Gerbers m1111ma/111 \!lt'tl/ j('ll I'/ /11/li'I • • • ........ ............... ..................................... • 7 5t each •
Dendrobium Orchids dt'l:a111. lm1~·la11inl! ~_;,,(';:........ ....... ...... ..... .. ........................... .99t per l\lem
Roses / l~ 111n11111re. don1n111 . .. .. .. ...................................................................................... from57 .00 per bunch of 25
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Written notes tucked away in a
crevice, obviously left on a slow
nigll<.
He still rises early llftting into
work at 7:30 a.m., hours before
the restawanl opens. These days
be leaves earlier, around 7 to 8
p.m. He used to leave at mid-
rught. · •
Altbougn many of his cus-
tomers are longtime, loyal
patrons, there 'are those who
don't know why Hamilton is clos-
ing. An undercurrent of discon-
tent still stings while he politely
explains a myriad of reasons. But
Hamilton still maintains if the
City Coundl had approved his
request !or a U~e entertairtment
permit two years ago, th1s ending
might be different.
The council denied Hamilton's
permit, e ven though the proposal
was backed by the Plafl.1ling
Commission and the Police
Department. Residents com-
plained about noise and some
council members figured more
problems could be created by the
penrut.
The council had the last deci-
sion, 4 to 2, with one abstention,
that it was m the city's best mter-
est to keep the village quiet.
·w e were on the horns of a
dilemma,• said Councilman John
Noyes. "We were trying to tone.
down what w.ent on down there.
I think it's unfair to say the coun-
cil's decision prompted the
restaurant's closing. I'm sorry Bill
feels that way."
Looking back on the debate,
Hamilton wishes he did more to
pacify the situation and maybe
save the restaurant from its
demise.
"I fault myseU for not sitting
down with the council,• he said.
•There wasn't any malice on the
council's part. They didn't pur-
posefully want to put me out of
busines~ But I feel sorry for the
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.. city because they are losing an
important landmark."
Ask any of the mAJOr player1t
in Newport and one word is
repeatedly utte red from their
mouths: respect.
•Bill put more time mto two
careen than most people do mto
one,• said RiChard Luehrs, pre.st•
dent of the Newport Beach
Chamber of Coounerce. ·very
few people have been committed
to a business and a community
like Bill Hamilton.•
Police ChJef Bob McDoneU
said the Cannery was a good
"corporate neighbor,• primarily
due to Harn!lton's work ethic.
McDonell admits he, too, will
miss the restaurant.
. "When l was hired for this job
six years ago, lhe first place we
ate with the mayor and city man.
ager was the Cannery,• he said ..
"If there was a problem, you
could count on Bill to take care of
it. That restaurant was a well-run
organization."
Hamilton doesn't like taking
aJJ the crecfit'He has 100 employ-
ees who have worked hard for
him. A reunion party of past and
present employees was held last
week. He took time and thanked
each one of them.
Hamilton hopes the restau-
rant's legacy isn't forgotten. He
remembers the days as a dapper-
ly dressed young man when he
would go to the Rendezvous Ball-
room and dance to the sounds or
big bands. The dance hclll
burned down in 1966. The only
memento of the ballroom is a
pla,que where the building once
stood.
·vou get a special feeling
when you walk through these
doors," Hamilton said, pausing
as each word resonated with him.
"l hate to see it disappear. I guess
all there will be JS a plaque ~n a
s1dewalk:.•
~~-~-..,_, ..... ~Jr'*"*"*
RACE fOI THl1'Ala
The SUND G. K6men 8reMt
Cancer Poundatien'S 8th
Annual Or~ge County Race
for the Cure is seeking 1~00
volunteers for the race, to be
held Sept. 26 in Newport
Beach. The-goal of th.it year's
race is to raise $1.2 nilllion.
Positions are open for volun-
teers on the Race's Planning
Committee. Speakers
Bureau, Team R~stratiQn,
Packet Ptck·up ·and race
weekend activities. For more
information call (714) 957-
9165 or visit the website
www.occure.com.
REACH OUT FOR SENIORS
Volunteers are needed to pro-
vide companionship and
friendship to 1S0lated seniors
in Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa. Training and support
are offered, and volunteers
must be 18 or older. For more
information, call (949) 442-
1000.
SAVE OUR YOUTH
The West Side Costa Mesa
youth organization is looking
for volunteers to helJtreate a
positive alternative for people
12 to 23 years old. Volunteers
are needed to help in areas
such as boxing, sports, health,
fitness, aerob1cs and academ·
ic tutoring. For information,
call (949) 548-3255.
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lhursdcry, September 9, 1999 VOIUnteer · directory Doily PilOt
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ASSN •• ORANGE COONTY DtAPTER .
:rhe Amyotrophic Lateral Scle-
tos1s Assn., Orange County
-Ghapter, needs many volun-
teers. For information, call the
;aiapter office at (714) 375.
922.
AM01CAN CANC11 SOCIETY
ROAD TO RECOVEIY
This transportation pr<>gram
needs volunteers to drive cancer
patients to and from medical
treatments free of charge. The
required commitment 1s a few
hours each week or month. Dri·
vers need a valid dnver's license
and insurance, and must be at
least 25 year:; old. Volunteers
may use either their own vehi-
cles or American Cancer Society
HEIMER'S ASSN.OF ORANGE vans. For more information, call a>UNTY (949) 261-9446 or send e-mail to
H elpline assistants and group scomer@cancer.org.
. leaders needed. li'aining sessions AMERI''"'' HEART ASSN. are available. For more informa-'-AN
lion, call (714) 283-t 111. · The American Heart Assn. is .. looking for volunteers to per-
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY • 'form various general offi~
(Q\e Orange County Region of the duties in the main office and
American Cancer Society seeks implement educational and fund
Office ~olunteers. The society is raising events through Orange
also seeking volunteers to answer. County. No experience neces-
calls for the urut's Helplme Info. sary, ·training will be provided.
Center. For more information, call For more inJormalion, call (949)
(949) 261 -9446. 856-3555.
AMERICAN CANCER SOOETY
DISCOVERY SHOP
The American Cancer Sooety
Discovery Shop needs volunteers
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
through Saturday at 2600 E. Coast
Highway, Corona del Mar. For
more information, Cl1ll (949) 640-
4777.
AMERICAN HOME HEALTH
HOSPICE PROGRAM
The American Home Health Hos-
pice Program needs volunteers to
give emotional support to termi-
nally Ul patients and their families
in the greater Orange County
area. 1Taining is provided. For
information, call (714) 550-0800 or
(800) 540-2545.
Ml•CMmD~a OMNCll COUNTY
1be e>,ange Countj Oaptar ol
the AJierk:a.n a.ct Crau ne8dl
volWlteen to address community
groups about Red Crou services
artd to act as UaisOns with the
media in diluter and emergency
situations. Por information, call
Judy Iannaccone, (714) 835·
5381.
ASSN. RENAISSANa CREATORS
The Cost~ Mesa group sponsors
and supports outreach conununi-
ty service programs, such as the
homeless s81lctuary. Volunteers
are needed: For more informa-
tion, call (714) 540-5803.
BIG BROTHERS: BIG SISlJRS
OFORANGECOUNTY .
Men and women over 20 years
old who have lived in Orange
County for at least six months and
have been on the job for at least
three months are needed to serve
os big brothers or big sisters' for
children ages 6 to 16 from single-
parent homes. For information,
call {714) 544-7773
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA INC.,
ORANGECOUNTYCOUNCL
Volunteer opportunities include
fund-raising, program develop-
ment and training to existing
troops and packs. For more infor-
mation, call (714) 546-4990.
' ..
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Your 'kids can use Comcast @Home to
get mart and .tay that wuy. We have a
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that gives them one-click access to a
clirtionary, thesauruii or encydopedill.
They can u e the Homework Hel~r
for assi tance on a book report or a
scicnre pmject. Or1 thc>y can go to Fox
NCW5 vidoos for cumnt events. With Comcast @Home,
yuu1l !!ave on trip to the libl'3ry. .
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IOYI ~cum Of COSTA .... • Dll'F llACH
The tbNearea dubl need volun·
teer CCNICbel and arts and crafts
workshop tMcben. FOr locations
and more Information, call (949)
642-2~5.
CIN'I& POI CREATIVE
ALTEINATMS
1be otganization works through
the United Way and needs vol\111·
teen, graduate level interns or
trainees. For more information,
call (949) 642-0377.
COU.EGE HOSPITAL
The College Hospital Costa
Mesa Auxiliary is seeking volun·
teers to perform clerical, recep-
tion desk, gift shop 4nd other
duties. For more infonnation, call
(949) 642-2734 between 9 a.m.
and 4p.m. ·
COMMUNITY SERVICE
PROGRAMS SEXUAL ASSAULT
VICTIM SERVICES OF ORANGE
COUN1Y
Volunteers needed to1 provide
assistance on the crisis hotline
and at the hospital. There is a spe-
cial need for bilingual and bicul-
tural volunteers. For more infor·
mation, call (949) 756-0677.
COSTA MESA OVtC PlAYHOUSE
The playhouse needs volunteers
for ushering, backstage, mailings,
typing, lights and many other
duties. Por more information, call
(949) 650-5269.
CDSTA.-sA
tlSTOllCAL SOCIE1Y
The IOtjety collects Uifonnation. ~ and artifacts relating to the
history of Costa Mase an() the bar·
bor area. Volunteen are needed
for clerical tasks, computer input
and help in the library. Por more
information, call (949) 631-5918.
COSTA MESA LITERACY COUNCIL
The Costa Mesa Literacy Center
needs volunteer tutors to teach
English as a second language. A
$30 materials fee provides
everything needed to lead a stu-
dent through two skill books. To
register, or for more information',
' call (949) 548-3384 or (949) 548-
6584 ..
COSTA MESA 1SENIOR CENTER
The multipurpose senior services
facility at the comer of 19th Street
and Pomona Avenue seeks volun-
teers for a · variety of tasks. For
more information, call (949) 645-
2356 between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
COSTA MESA
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Seniors age 55 and up are being
sought to help staff the westside
substation. Volunteers would be
asked to work two four-hour day-
time shifts per week and would
be responsible for answering
phones, bicycle registration, fin-
gerprinting, data entry and assist
with other citywide projects.
Bilmgual seniors in Spanish and
English are also needed. For an .
Ask about"
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714•547•4970
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CARPET$
OVER 25 YEARS IN COSTA MESA
iappucation or more iDfQrmiticJn:
contact Senior Volunteer Prec:t
Gaeck.ler at (?14) 754-5208.
Cla5IS ASSISTANCE
MOGUMINC.
Thil nonprofit organization is
~ volunteen for its expand· .
ingtrawna ~program; Vol-
unteen would UsiSt law enforce-
ment, fire fighters and emergency• cype responders by providing
emotional first aid and support to
injured or traumatized people.
Other volunteers would provide
dispatch and office support. No
experience is necessary, training
will be provided. For more infor•
mation, ,call (949} 588-1414.
DISPUTI: RESOLUTIPN SERVICES
Volunteer mediators, ca.Se special-
J.Sts and outreach assistants need-
ed to help in a variety of mediation
cases. Bilmgual language skills
are needed for office volunteers
and for mediators. For more infor-
mation, call (949~ 250-0488.
EASTER SEALS
The Easter Seals Society needs
volunteers for ongoing clerical
work and to help in programs for
children with disabilities and in
special events. For more informa-
tion, call (714) 834-11 ! t. ·
ENVIRONMENTAL NATURE aNTE~
Volunteer trail guides needed t4
help visitors learn about theif
environment. For more inf onna"
tion, tall (949) 645-8489. I
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CONTINUED FROM A 1
dosed all of its stores, including
.We one m Costa Mesa on Harbor
Boulevar~ and Baker Street.
. miere are plans to tum six o( the
10 former Fedco stores into Tar-
gets, said Patty Morris, spokes-
woman for the chain of cliscount
aepartment stores.
• Target is "very excited• about
the Costa Mesa location, said
Howard Covert. project director
tor the Fedco/Target conver-
&ions. Representatives for Target
have presented preliminary
designs for the &ite to city offi-
cials and neighboring residents.
• The plan is to build. a Target
Greatlands store and other sup-
portive retail on the 17-acre site,
which is south of the San Diego
Freeway, Covert said. The size
of the parcel allows for the larg-
er Target store and development
of adjacent buildings that would
house other retail, Covert said.
• •Jf."S' a unique opportunity for
teuse of that site,• he said.
Covert said Tl\,J'gel plans to
file an official application wtth
the city any day now. However,
ownership of the Fedco assets
has not been completed and the
company must wait for a final
hearing in mid-to late-October.
Morris said.
Covert and other representa·
tives have met with residents
about the project at their
· request, said Gilbert Collins,
president of the Halecrest/Hall
of Fame Homeowners Assn.
He said there were noise and
traffic problems associated with
Fedco wheri jt was open. How·
ever, Collins said residents were
e ncouraged by Target's proposal
to raze the Fedco building and
construct a new facility that
wo4J6 have internal loading
docks. · ·
Al Morelli, a Costa Mesa rest-
dent who owns rental property
near the site, said he still had
concerns and didn't want Tar-
get's gain to be his loss.
•There have been issues
between us and Fedco, • Morelli
said . "At least we came to a res-
olution. We have been doing
that for the last 14 years. I don't
want to start from ground zero." ..
CHILD~EN'S BOUTIQUE CONSIGNMENT~
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SEPTEMBER 24 •
OCTOBER24, 1999
I.ow• prkcd pl'C'Vlewi l:qin September 21
0 ur of the Wc.\t coma t gripping
p•ycho-drama by Amcti~'s mo r
volatile playwright, • nory of two
brothers he:aJing toward an 011tr"8rou1
¥tr ion of the movie howdown.
....... ._ l'llJ(Jlll~
Of.NlSE C'ACJAGU MOON AND MICHAEL J. MOON
-IUMai oc WUll.f -
'
FILM
CONTINUED FROM A 1
( .
been suggested by some m the
cornmwuty that this could have
been averted had the aty pro:
vidcd more fun.cling. Many of
the successful independent film
festivals ge.t a significant
DECLEOR
amount of financial backing
from.their host cibes.
Dave Kiff, a.ssu.tant to the city
manager, said the city's modest
support or the festival was not
· unusual because the council
typically doe n't fund art func-
tions not sponsored by the aty.
"It was the consoous choice
of the council to focus its pnori-
I
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•"The largest & Finest Beauty SUpply & I ., r Full ~rvlce Solon In Orange County•• I
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ties on other areas," KiU said.
Even so, count:il members were
shocked to hear the news. ·
"I was a supporter of the film
festival,• said Mayor Dennis
O'Neil. •u attracted visitors to
our oty and was a very worth-
while event. I looked forward to
it each year.• But Quartararo
said he is still holding out hope
I I
I
...
Thursday, ~ 9, 1999 A I
'that the ftnancial challenges will
be resolved •for the communi-
ty'5 sake.•
"I understand· the festival
ma.nagen)ent faced some mra-
orclliiary challenges in recent
years," he said. •However. the
demand for an international film
festival ui Orange County cer-
tairlly exists.•
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•~·-u• ... -ioctwrh~A"""b•• ~"'' ,. •• ....,.,_.,. .-..... Ftr,.. """"••u· The folowlnQ ~ ChliVt IPPlllS a Ylllllll U11n1ln1 Ftt (Vlf),...... ._ •.• II f1.•,.,.., GcMmmlnt ~ taa, IU ~ ~ """'· IUCh • i1fuelng. lft eXlTI .................. (LDW) ... ··-. -• CA: era ywr uomobll Nnncl policy tor ...... Clf OO't:flllll..... a '" • 11 ~IO Souhn1 ClllOnlil.,.. loc:ifiOf1' lhnMl8h 12131198 Wlllilud -* muet Ill pielllll .., llllWf1 TIUldly noon.,~. fiMNd bf .. • d .. _ • ....._
Ind rtQUlrt• s..t"'*i nlfll llllp ~Pie*~ II Mlllbll In loCll ... ND cuw11.a.i CIKG• or~-.... anR .......... ,.. • . .. ..-c.
DIOOl1P'1IC Ind l1ltUM 111trlc:tl0nl"" Mrl1mum ,..... IOI fof ltlil Ofllt' 1125 '41llt1My II llmlld lfld 24~ .._. ~-• '""*9d. Proaf at nu .,,. .._lie--~· ,
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Thursdoy, ~ 9, 1999 society
Fall social season, begins wilh mg-AIDS benefit II
OVARIAN CMCD •8R
T he summer it winding
down and the sooal s~a
son is off to a busy st.art.
This weekend, the 14th annual
Big Splash benefiting AIDS Ser-
vices Foundation Orange County
expects to raise in excess of
$400,000 to support local AIDS
programs.
The B1g Splash is named for
the show produced and per-
formed,]Jterally in the backyard
pool at the Laguna Beach home
of Ken Jillson and Al lloberts.
It's been called campy, outra·
geous, bizarre and oU the wall,
and for the past 13 years slit-
tle bit of Orange Co culture
bas raised millio or people
with AIDS.
This year, Jillson and Roberts
are calling the production
·splashin' On Safari, The Ulti-
mate Musical Adventure.• The
totally volunteer show, with
every peony of cost underwrit-
ten, preuueres Frida~and runs
through Sunday.
-
Tll CIOWI
Locals involved include John
Benecke, Pearl Jemilon-Smlth1 Barbara (ilabman, Janke and
Roger Johnson, JudJth O'Dea
Morr, Anita May llosensteln,
Kathryn Thompson, BWur Wal-
lerich and Kevin Wendie. For
more information, call (949) 580·
2092.
•
Opera Pacific celebrates the
close of summer with Festa Ital·
MICHAEL V.
ELAM~t.D.
Summer Power Peel
Sped al
s99
Vo <f I s.,. ..... i,. 0 1900
CAl.l FOR Af"'QINTMEMT • Flt££ CONSUlTATIONS •
949-:721·1113
360 SAN MIGUEL DR .• SUfTE 207
NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92660
•
members of
.
iana Sunday evening at the
livine Bowl. It is the opening of
the seuon tor the opera in
Orange County, and the first
time Opera Pacific bas had a
concert at the bowl.
A pre-concert dinner begins at
5:30 at nvoll Too, with the con-
cert set for 8 p.ni. The nvoli Ter·
race on the grounds of the Irvine
Bowl will be the site for the post·
concert artists and underwriters
reception. Opera Pacific, under
the executive direction of Martin
G. Hubbard, and the artistic
dir~on of John DeMaln, heads
into a new and highly antidpat·
r ed year-0f opera on the Orange
Coast.
For las·t-minute reservations
and/or information on Festa Ital·
iana, call Sabrina Torres at (949)
474-4488.
•
In other music news with a
social twist, the respected
William Hall Master Chorale
kicks off its forthcoming season
with a gala organizers are call·
ing a visit to the "Newport Riv-
iera."
On Sept. 26, conductor
William Hall will lead bis
patrons on a ~·ater cruise of the
SEBASTIAN • DEAMALOGICA
• w~~~m~ • -0 ~ z ~ w
~
0 ~ w
~ a:
• • Ci) ....J
~ ....J w
:i: ~ () .....
(J) ::E • ....J
~ :J ~ ~ • • .,, c(
:i: CD a CD c(
• •
MAST-EV • M.D. FORMULATIONS
our healthcare lamilj: .. ·
Board-certified pediatricians Shelley Ouwon, M.D,
and Wery Brouwer, M.D, have joined the Edinger
l\\edical Group ~iatrics department.
• Berrram Dias. M..D • Harry Rllman. MD
• Mai-Kbanb Tran, MD • Burton Willis, .M.D
Shelley Chacon , MD tlnd
Valery Brouwer, MD ..
Boairf ·Certlfted Pediatricians
I
J;, chedufe sn appointment, coif:
(714) .438-3838
I
EmN<JEit
~f El>ICAt '
GROUI~ I c.
Dr. Chacon and Dr. Brouwer are also
members of the physician staff at r~untain Valley
Regional Hospital and Medical Center. Together
with the entire pedio1rte staff at I::dinger Medical
group. they are dedicated to prov.ding comprehensive
care for the n!west members of your family.
• 2"'-bou.r on-cal I pediatrician
• 2-'f-boor nu~ advice
• Coo.-enient appointment bours
• £ne~ weekend at></ boliday appoin~ts
• Major insurance p/ansaccepted
Newport Harbor with anchor-
age at the estates of Joan and
Tom Rlacb on Lido Isle and
Belle and Jack Lindquist on
Linda Isle. The generous Penny
and Ralph Jlodhelm of Balboa
Boat Rentals will provide the
vessels of transport, while hosts
prepare a sumptuous spread
......... w... ...... .., .. "' .. .' pm111,.."5 .... ., ...... c.r .. . ,.. ... .. -·-
for the trav-
elers. The
first stop Will
be the band·
some con-
temporary ·
Riach home.
One look
will take
your breath
away.
Joan
Riach is busy
organizing a
first-class
spread of champagne, wine
and overflowing hors d'oeuvres
prepared and served by Cafe
Francais of Orange. Then it's
off. to the. lovely traditional
waterfront residence of the for·
mer president of Disneyland,
Lindquist, and his chanrung
wife, Belle.
"Our home is not decorated,
but collected,• offers Belle, as
she opens the doors to the New-
port-Mesa crowd in support of
William Hall. While dessert is
being served, Robln Buck, a fea-
turea soloist Wlth the chorale,
Orange Coast College
2701 Fairview, Costa Mesa
(714) 432-5880, ext. 1
will entertain.
Buck, who lives m Europe and
travels the world on the concert
drcwt, recently completed a run
in the title role of •Phantom of
the Opera." The festivities will
include a bit of the •music of the
night. ..
To book your cruise space, call
(714) 556-6262. Dress code is
what else but riviera casual.
•
The Sounds of Hope is the
name of an evening being
pllµllled by Prevent Child
Abuse Orange Coµnty. bn Oct.
8, the Pacific Club, Newport
Beach, will become the venue
of hope for some 30,000 dlll-
dren in this region who are vic-
tims of child abuse. Orange
County Sheriff Michael Corona
will serve as honorary chair of
the evening vlith support from
chair Todd Spitzer, Orange
County board of supeIVlsor, Dis·
trict. 3.
Judith Ware, -president of
Ware Disposal Inc., will -::>rv.~ as
hostess for the evening wit~
other support coming frorn ~
broad cross-section of communi-
ty. For more information, call
Barbara Oliver, executive direc-
tor of Prevent Child Abuse,
Orange County at (714) 258-
2272.
• B.W. COOK's column appears ~ery
Thursday and Saturday.
Pre-Season
'98/ '99 Skis, Boots, Bindings
20-70%0FF
•Ski Boots from .$79.99
•SL<i.JlindJng~ from -$69.99
~ ...
Salon Cntw, a~.._
at 1be UlblAnti·MaJl. wiD
donate all~ from
Sunday's appoiiltmlmts to
organlzationl fighting ovad·
-aircancer. The benefit takel
place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The Lab is at 2930 Bristol St.,
Costa Mesa. For more infor ..
mation, call (714) 966-6661.
PLAYHOUSE AUCTION
Children's playhouses will
~ be auctioned to raise money
for the Orange County and
greater Los Angeles!Veritura
chaptPrs of HomeAid at
Fashion lsland, 8"3 Newport
Cent~r Drive, Newport
Beach. The playhouses, •
which will be available for
guided tours starting Sept
19, Will be auctioned Oct. 16
at 5 p .m. nckets to the auc-
tion are $20 and tours are
available for $5. Call (949)
757-0520 for information.
CAR SHOW
The Assessment and
1Yeatment Services Center
will hold its 17th annual
Newport Beach Concours
d'Elegance on Oct. 3. The
Concoun. d'Elegance, a car
show and rally, will be held
at the Pelicdn Hill Golf
Course on Pelican Hill Road:
Admission is $20 per person.
Forinfol1Tllltion,call(949)
756-0993 .
burtOn . Bonfire Clothing
· up to •
Alt Connelly
Waterskis
&
'98/ '99 Burton · 60% OFF
Snowbocird BOots r-7 ...
up to ~
40% OFF BONFIRE
C:a""1!ell.U.
ewe Wakeboards
Waterski &
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-Oemos on Salel 40% OFF
msrp
* SKl&SPORTS
NEWPORT BEACH
Formerly Ne~ Sid Co.
2100 •• c.a "'"'.w•Y (941) 131·J2-.0 •
\ date book Jhvudoy, ~be< 9, l 999 ·A IJ
..
Couple of loser types come of age on the big screen.
• EDITOR'S NOTE: The Reel Cnt1a col-umn features movie critiques written by
community members serving on our
programs on
TY. They
strike up a
conversation·
about their sad
lives in the
park over a
shared pint of
whiskey. .
co•••• lllllCllOIS
scruor Jane
W0$ton(Amy
Smart). Jane
shows him be
i.s more than he
believed hiIJl-
self to be and
pa he I.
'The Very Thought'
of: Hugh is enough
·T his past year seems to
have brought on a mini
•srttish mv.asion" at the
movies, what with "Shakespeare
in Love,• •Elizabeth,• •Austin
Powers.• •Notting Hill,• •Stiff
Upper Lip,• etc.
REEL CRffiCS ~c;;9~~~es
. looking for their
next fix, now there is "The Very
Tb.aught of You ,• a modest
British romantic comedy. It's sort
of a •Notting Hill"'light -it has
only 1/3 the star power and hall
the fat.
As told in flashback, we meet
Martha (Moruca Potter, in the
Julia Roberts role) who boards a
flight from Minneapolis to Lon-
don with only $35 to her name
and an urgent. wish to get a fresh
start on life. She meets Daniel
(Tom·HoUander), a sell-absorbed
music executive who immediate-
ly tries to finagle a seat next to
her on the plane.
Martha later ~ets Ftank
(Rufus Sewell, the anti-Hugh
Grant), a seU-cM:>sorbed fonner
child actor tdtlor-made· for one of
those "whatever happened to"
Al this
Susanne Perez point, the
. movie seem&
as a.unless and meandering as
Frank and Martha. But finally
she meets Lawrence (Joseph
Fiennes, of "Shakespeare in
Love"), a nof-quite-so-self-
absorbed bridge teacher (don't
ask). If you have any doubts
about Lawrence being more sen-
sitive and sincere than the other
two guys, just take a look at
those big brown puppy-dog eyes.
The major plot of this movie is
that all three men are 1)
extremely attractive losers in
their own right; 2) lifelong
friends with little in common;
and 3) in love with Mrutha. You
can probably figure out the rest.
Add the nearly exact same end-
ing as "The Thomas Crown
Affair,• and you have 90 minutes
with all the charm and gusto of a
cup of Earl Grey and a toasted
scone.
• SUSANNE PEREZ, 45, lives in Costa
Mesa and is an executive assistant for a
financial services company.
Educational Aide Materials
for Parents & Teachers
•Work Books (All Subjects)
•Stanford 9 Test Prep Materials
• Flash Cards • Christian Materials
• Learning Games & Much _More
• Laminating Available
Go 'Outside Providence'
for film like 'Mary' ' o utside Providence· is the latest film from the
Farrelly Brothers
( "Dwnb & Dumber,• "There's
SomeUung About Mary").
Hopmg to cash in on the fame
from last sununer's raWlchy .
smdsh hit, co-written and direct-
ed by the brothers and Michael
Corrente, the "Providence" dd
campaign identi(ies it as coming
from the guys who made ·
"There's Something About
·Mary.• In my opinido this is a
marketing mistake, as iI you
expect a film like 11 Mary,• you
will be disappointed.
Set in 1974, "Providence" is
more a coming-of-age story
about Tun Dunphy (played by
Shawn Hatosy), an alcohol-
2 for 1 Special!
Bring a friend ..
Two paint for the
price of 1.
Kevin
Costner
and Kelly
Preston
star ln
"For the
Love of
Game,"
set to
open
soon.
drinking, dope-smokmg hlgh
school senior from shabby and
seedy Pawtucket, R.I..
injected with warmth and
humor, the story follows Tim as he
is sent away from lus wdsted
friends and loser-lifestyle by his
blue-collar, working-class father
(Alec B.i.ldwin) to Cornwall Acad-
emy a New Englcllld, upper-crust
prep school. There he meets and
falls m love with pretty, well-bred.
I dild Ivy League college-bound
·that he can
break from his
past to make
something of
Richard. himseU.
Brunette Yes, there
• are bits of the
• Farrelly broth-
• ers' signature ta..stelessiless in this
• film (1 e. a three-legged dog
and/or a wheelchair-bound
younger brother who, while being
pulled behind a van on a rope,
slams into the va.n when it brakes
sharply). But for the most part
MProvidence" is a d~t. heart-
wamung story clearly meant to
appeal to a wider audience.
Although I thought everyone's •
perfonnanc~ in the film was fine
and it was a good film wi1h a few
laughs, I felt the movie was dis-
jointed, edited e rratically, and
ultimately the outcome was
mevitable and predictable.
Therefore, I can't give it my best
rating of •pay full price· or even
d "bargam matinee.•
But, rated R for drug use,
strong language, and sexual ref-
erences, I would highly recom·
mend 1t as Cl video rental.
• RJCHARD BRUNETTE, 35, is a recre-~
at1on supervisor with the city of Costa
• Mesa and a Costa Mesa resident
ANTIQUE ROW
The Country Inn
Garden Cafe
Ooh &Abu
The Book Store
Newport Picture Frame
· Stella's Place
Sarah Whitcomb
Orea Antiques
Victorian & Company Nevy Location
1215 Baker St., Unit}
Costa Mesa
Classes Starting ~owl .__ _________ __... Stenciling 101-$15
2890 McClintock Way, Unit F, Costa Mesa Stenciling 201-$22 130 EAST 17111 ST~ • OS'l"A MESA
A• ~e~n &: EMt •'1'9 Strut
(714) 432-865~ Stenciling 301-$28 Tole Painting -$12
(Baker & Fairview)
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ROW HOURS: Tue•Sat 10..m·~I*'
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P;un is )OUr body' way of indicating somethin~ is wrong.
Dr. Vihincn can bclp relieve pain-through nonsurgical methods.
• Bunion correction-No hospitalization • Ingrown toenails
• New treatment for fungus nails • Specializing in the treatment of
ntheletic & sports injuries • Utiliting new computerized foot an~lysis
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Or. Vihincn utilizes computerized gait analysis to help evaluate and dia(l.nose disorder
of the lower extrcmitie .
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307 Placentia, Ste. 207, Newport Beach
24 Hour Emergency Care 949-645-6544
Cal's CONTAX EVENT DAY
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• 949-644-3565
\
A 12 Thur~, September 9, 1999 dateOOok C>Oily Pila .
, S~perbly· staged· 'Saigon' goes toe to toe With 'Les Miz'
ToMTrruc; monium and the 111tema1 confla-
gration of personal heartache.
ness girls." Nishida thrusts hersell
and her superior singing voice
deeply into this tragic character.
F Ot those who wonder just'
what the creators of the
world's greatest musical
could do for an encore. the
answer is impressively on view
at the Orange County Perform·
ing Arts Center.
"Miss Saigon• ha.S often been
compared to Puccini's "Madame
ButterflyH for its depiction of·love
and loss involving an American
military man and his foreign
lover. This is accurate enough,
but there's also a few strains of
"West Side Story" present, not to
Greg Stone is staunchly
believable as the American
Marine whose life is forever
altered by Kim, and who
endeavors, three years later, to
do the right thing by her. Stone
brings a sense of power and
integrity to his role, rendering his
moralistic dilemma convincingly
in the solo "Why God, Why?"
When Frenchmen Alain Bou-
blil and Claude-Micl)el Schon·
berg turned
·mention memories of •Les Miz."
THEATER REVIEW . ~~~~r's "Les
.., Miserables"
into an awesome dramatic musi-
cal spectacle, they built their
show around histo:ricaJ foct, a ·
lower-class uprising in Paris in
the 19th century. Another history
lesson, America's involvement in
the Vietnam War, led to the cre-
ation of ~Miss Saigon."
The word "spectacle" hardly
qualifies as a description of "Miss
Saigon," a maelstrom of pulsat-
ing emotions set in 1975, lhe year
South Vietnam's capital fell, and
three years later in its painful
aftermath. The show brilliantly
Cdptures both the overall pande-
The latter moments are stirrM
by the presence of the Engineer,
an avatar of avarice who's at least
a second cousin to Thernardier.
Joseph Anthony Forpnda tackles
this role wit1'1i a seething devotion
to personal enbance,ment that
manifests itself in his glorious pro-
duction number "The American
Dream" late in the show. Foronda
revels in his consummate greed
as the ultimate street hustler, a
sterling performance.
Another upstanclmg GI who
can't forget the plight of the chil-
dren left behind is given a splen-
did rendertng by Eugene Bmry-
Hill. The role of Chris' American
'wife is powerfully interpreted and
beautifully sung by Jacquelyn
Piro, whose tortured solo, "Now
That I've Seen Her,• expresses
volumes of painful concem.
Johnny Fernandez, in a char-
acter recalling Chino from "West
Side Story,• excels as the Viet-
namese soldier promised to Kim
from chilclbood, riveting in their
fateful confr~ntation and haunt-
ing in his later reappearance, Lit-
tle Brittney Bui, all of 4 years old,
is delig.btful as the son Chris left
The heart-rending core of the
production, however, is Mika
Nishida's achingly realistic·por-
. trayal of Kim, the teen-age Viet-
namese girl thrust (like "Les
Miz's" Fantine) by personal
poverty into a life of degradation
as one of the Engineer's "busi-
Sandwich House
We use Fresh Turkey for our sandwiches,
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We use a 1 /2 p·ound of r~al fruit
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Re~taurant Directory
RIVERBOAT RESTAURANT
On board the "Pride of Newport" Riverboat home of the Newport
Harbor Nautical Museum (Formerly Reuben E Lee! Open for lunch
Tues Fri 11 am-3pm Brunch served Saturday & Sunday Bam-3pm
Dinner served Wed Sun 5pm 1 Opm We cater corporatA! and
prrvat.e events. weddings & benQuets All ma1or credit cards
accepted located At 151 E Coast Hwy Newport Beach. (9491
673-3425 Fax 19491 673 2175
CHESTER DRAWERS' INN
A Costa Mesa trad1t1on tor·good times for the past 15 years Jorn
us for fabulws 113 lb burgers served with curly tnes. spicy buffalo
wings or one of our other munchables En1oy your tavonte beverages .
during happy hour from 3pm-8pm dally All day on Sunday Te1r your
friends to meet you here En1oy basketball foosball. pinball. golden
tee 99. dartsl Kitchen Hours are 3pni 1 Opm. 7 days a week
located at 179 E 17th St #A 1n Costa Mesa !9491 631-4277
JACK SHRIMP
Ser"Vlng authentic lou1s1ana cuisine 1n an upbeat.. casual atmosphere
with patio d1ntng Try our Jackshrimp plates, or the Jammin'
Jambalaya Take-out and dahvery evadable Located at 2400 W
Coest Hwy 19491 650-5577
NEWPORT RIB COMPANY
We are located ot 2196 Harbor Blvd lthe old Sizzler) We offer a
cocktail lounge, larger banquet facdibes more partong, end a
separate catering kitchen Opsn foc lunch and dinner We hev9 the
I best baby back nbs In Orange County served 111 e warm and
comfortable setbng C949l 631"2110 ..
ZUBIES CHICKEN COOP
we·r'9 more then 1ust chtckanl In addition to OlK' Roti&GGfre,
Broasted, end Grilled Ctncb!n. we offer St.eek. Seafood Prime Rib,
Baby Back Ribs, P1Z7e, e 22 item appetizer meru end mote
Generous portions bt a GREAT value Come check us OUtl Open for
lunch. dinner, (J)llza arid eppetizere served afl day) and Sunday
Bre~ta t Full cocktail bar BalQueL fooht1es up to 70 Geme room
soon to ba open 414 Old Newport 81vd <Comer 01 H06p1tal Aoed
and Old NewPOrtl In Newport Bear.ti !9491 645·6086
NEWPORT BEACH BREWING CO.
The drily bl'e~ 11'1 Ncwpgrt Beech, wt MM ew9rd 'W!Mtng beem
& we haYe a fllnt8$tic rood meru w!t.h outdOor dinlno end lots of
FREE pat411ng locat4!d et 2920 Newport Blvd Hain. 3 1 ~
t 1 3(}pnJ &ti Thurs 11 30tlm-1 00 m Frl&t 1949> 675-8449
'
BASILIC RESTAURANT
Offi;t1ng a variety of Swiss French cu1s1ne. located st 217 Manne
Ave on Balboa Island D11111er served Tues • Sun 5 30 • 10 p.m for
reservations please call !9491 673-0570
PINOT PROVENCE
Joachim Spltchals only Orange County restaurant features
Mediterranean fare inspired by the countryS1de of Southern FraRCe in
e splendid setting, rich with antiques and rustic elegance.
Recogmzed by the James Beard Foundation Mon-Sat·
Breakfast/l..unclv'Ouiner Sun BruncM.unclv'Dinner 17141 444.5900
TROQUET
With a decor rem1mscent of the cort. chic bistros of France. Troquet
offers superb. modem French bistro coolong by chef Tim Goodell
Excellent wme list. Magrnf1que desserts• Top Rated Restaurant -
Southern Calrfomia Zagat Survey Recognized by the James Baard
Foundation Mon-Sat.lunch/Dtnner Closed Sunday 171.41 708-6865
SIR ROGERS, LTD
Sandwiches, coffee and espresso drinks & smoothies All new
breakfast menu. Catering available Open Mon-Fri at Sam Set at
7em and Sun at 9am. Located at 270 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa
19491~2252
ROYAL KHYBER
Award Winning Cuisine of India Open for lunch Mon -Fri. 11 3()..
2pm Closed for lunch on Saturday Sunday Brunch Buffet ser.ied
11 30-2 30pm. Dinner served from 5 30pm. Located et the South
Coast Plaza ViUage, 1621 W. Sunflower Ave. C714l 436-1010
SABATINO'S R~STAURANT &
SAUSAGE COMPANY
Pasta, caesar salad, homemade sausage. veal, lamb, vegetenan
dishes Wlne. beer. cappuccino & dessert. Hours. 7 days a
week 58f'Ving Sal. & Sun blulcli from B 30·1·00. Sun.·Thurs
1 1em·10pm Fn -sat 11 am-11 pm All maior credit cards accepted
Located At 251 Shipyard Way.Newport Beech 19491 723-0621
NEWPORT NOODLE
'Where the Poss1bd1ties Are Endleea • This former Newport Rib
Company location at 2000 Newport Blvd We offer guests a wide
orray of dehcious pasta11, chicken, stel!k and seafood et pnces
affil('dable for the whole family. Ou' warm comfortable bOoths. full ·w . kids' menu end banquet room are well worth the v1s1t Open
every day at 4 00 pm. Take iu evenabla after 11.30 AM 19491
54810099
ZUCCHERO RISTORANTE
Cane end try the other tast.e ot Italy lrad11Jonel 8....cont.emporety
!Lehan menu pre~d by Chef Saiwl Adame We offer e full bar & e
variety of wines to choose from En1oy exqui<a cui&ine iO e romantic
setting Open r~ dirtnef' Qnly 5 00pm.10 30pm Friday & Saturday
5 ~11 30p m Located et 215 R1vera1de Ave. Across From the
Poat Office Rewvatms Stigge&ted 19491 646-2333
SAPORI , .
lta11ao Mod tor tieartr e11tn Open H ·30em·10(}()pm, S\llday
Ttusday 1 1 308m 11 OOpm Friday Se~ IOCl!ted et 1000
B«f,!ide Clrlvt, 1949l 644<42i?O
ARMANICAFE
Adjacent to the Emporio Amlari boutiQUe, Armenl Cet6 oftn •
styliilh 88tt.lng tor • ttgtit meel O;ne on Bl4>trb d this trom Northern
Italy ~ enjoy a glass of WIM on the OWIOOr petlo Serving lt.ich &
d'ift181' dally l.oc8ted fllllW' Jewel Cnlrt In SolA.h Coast Plaza 17141
754-0300
behind.
Then there is that helicopter.
Like the chandelier in "Phantom
of the Opera," it's the centerpiece
of "Miss Saigon," a spectacular
effect that punctuates the frenzied
exodus from the capital as the
North Vietnamese close in. It's
actually the first sound you hear
in the show, but you must wait
until midway into the second act
to see it up close and personal in
a stunning flashback sequence.
vMiSs Saigon,• superbly ·
staged by Nicholas Hytner with
equally impressive musical stag-
ing by Bob Avian, exudes a pow-
er and passion rarely expertenced
in the musical theater. It stands
toe to toe with "Les Miserables,"
which is the ultimate compliment.
Unlike the normal center
weeklong run, •Miss Saigon•
will be around through Sept. 25,
whkh should give local theater-
goers ample opportunity to expe-
rience its emotional power and
technical magni~de.
• TOM Tl1US reviews local theater for
the Daily Pilot. His reviews appear Thurs-
days and Sat~rdays.
'ms SAllOll'
•WtW: ~~Per-
forming Arts
'~'°° Town Center
Drive, Costa
Mesa +WHEN: Now
through •
Sept. 25; .
show times-
are Tuesdays
through Fri-
days at 8
p.m., Satur-
days at 2
and8p.m.,
Sundays at 2
and 7 p.m.
(dark Mon-~a~)
MUOt: $41-
$66
+PHONE:
(714) 740-
7878
Mika Nishida clutchelher son as Johnny Fernandez threat·
ens his IUe in a tense scene from "Miss Saigon" at the
Orange County Performing Arts Center.
t11C11tJe No matter what you're doing,
your hometown newspaper
ESTABLISHED 1962
Steak • Seafood • Cocktails
1695 Irvine Ave. 646-7944
FITS IN ••• Daily Pilot
PU NI AB
CUl~NE OF INDIA
www.gcnieots.com/?punJo~r
18687 BROOKHURSTST.• FOUNTAlN VALLEY
(714) 963-6777
Rne Dining • Open 7 dpyt • lUOcfl t 1:3Q·2:30Qln, Dinner 5:30· lOpm
All you can eat Buffet lunch '5" • Sunday Ctton1>0gne Brunch '7"
·l 5o/~ 1/2 OFF 1/2 OFF =~ DINNER . -911)' One a.-&M At lleg Nc9. lllY OM Mitt 0t tnincll pg 2
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Your Total Dinner ~II ... =-~:-.:....-r.:..'\':.. .... ,. .. .....,_..,. __ ( __ Oil'-. ·----....... ·-·-*' ... ...._ ... .:r=ra-~...... ..
VILLA NOVA
Villa Nova offers Classic Italian Cuisme with a spectacular view
Featunng horoemade pastas. ·fresh seafood & veal specialties end a
unique waterfront ambiance reminiscent or an Italian Countryside
Professional service & an award winning wine list delight patrons
Vttt1le dintng 1n this romantlC setting. live entertainmeot begins
mghtly at 9pm. The upsta1rs'Cigar Lounge features premium cigars,
spirits end an l!xtensive appetizer menu. located at 3131 West
Coast Hwy 19491 642-7880 '
LUGANO CUCINA DEL
MERCATO
The sophisticated ambiance will remind you at a Milanese caf6.
Oelicioua meals lure sawy dinners to this posh spot where palate-
pleasing fare is created using only the freshest ingredients Mon-Fn
. Breakfast/lunch/Dinner, Sat-Sun. Dinner. Located at 650 Anton Blvd
1714} 668-0880
AMACHI
Sushi & Sushi to Go. Complete Ber All Major Credit Cards Located
At 2675 lrvioe Ave !Across from Newport Golf Course! 19491 645-5518
BEN I HANA
America's most celebrated Japanese restaurant Open 7 days e
week Lunch 11;30-2:30pm Mon.-Frl., Dinner 5·30-10pm Mon.·
Thurs . 5 30· 11 OOpm Fn .. 5·00· 11 .0()pm Sat .• 4:30.9:30pm Sun
loeat2d at 4250 Bu"Oh St 949-955-0822 .
Ml CASA
Our meals are now e tnp to Ba1a as well as Mexico. Ndw olfenng fish
tacos. Phone ahead for orders to-go Hours Daily from 11 em All
me1or credit cards accepted Located At 296 17th St . Costa Me5a
1949) 645-7626
AVILA'S EL RANCHITO
Authentic Mexican fciod. witli the freshest ingred1en;s & a new light
cu1s1ne. Great margaritas. Hours· Lunch & Dinner Ah ma1or credit
cards eocepted. Located et 2101 Placentia, Costa Mesa -642·
1142: 2BOO Newport Blvd , Newport Beach-675-6855 and 2744
E Coast Hwy • COM -19491 644·8226
LAGRANJA
MEDITERRANEAN GRILL .
The distinctive cu1s111e of Ma1orc&-A blend of the best of Spanish end
Mediterranean flavors featuring tapes, paella, fresh seafood,
88SQUe•styte grilled meats, fine wines end sp1nta Lunch 1s served
11 ·00am to 2;30pm Omer le served 6.00pm to 11 ·00pm
l.oc8t.ed at 1000 Bristol North !between Birch & Jamboreel 1949)
252·9396
INKA GRILL
Expeneoce U11 new flllYOI' 1n Orenge COl.rity. EntoV e Ell'IYAsl8n atyla
blend of cu1sll'lt eCcented with the sp1cee of 6ol.dl America Beer a
wines evadable Hours ere Mon.-n..n 11 ·30emto9pril, Sl#l 5pm
to 9pm Ind Fri.·Set, 11 308m to 9 30pm Locet.ed et 260 Bnstol
St et Rad Hill tn Costa Mel8 714-4444Nf<A 146521
THE ARCHES
The premu.m steak and seafood house en Orange County sroce 1922.
Serving lunch Mon ·Fri 11 .SOam until 3.(]()pm. Dinner served
nightly until 1 ·00am located on NewpOft Blvd & Coast Hwy 10
Newport Beach 19491645·7077
MORTON'S OF CHICAGO
This venerable steak.house 1s renowned for generous portions of
perfectly prepared prime aged. grain-fed beef as well es hrst·rate
seafood and des$erts served 1n an upscale dining club anq, bar
setting Privote d1n1ng rooms available. Top rated restaurfnt -
Southern California Zagat Survey Mon·Sun D1merAete Ntght
Located at South Coast Plaza Village C714l 444-4834
SCOTT'S SEAFOOD GRILL &
BAR
A popular, award-winning restaurant ~ for Its quality dining
expenence that is as famous for its cla5srcally prepared fresh
seafood as tts aged prime beef Save room f~ a sumptuous dessert
Deity· lunchl01nnerA..ete Night After OCPAC located at 3300
Bnstol St .. across Crom South Coast Plaza (7141 979-2400
CATALINA FISH KITCHEN
Get hooked on the freshest fisli available Fresh gnlled fish. seclfood
and chicten, sandwiches, salads, grilled plates and peste specialties
Open seven days a week Mon. thru Sat 1 1 am-9pm. Suoclay 11 am-
7pm Catenng evadable. Located at 670 W. 17th St #GB. COsta
Mesa lWest of the nf1'N Trader Joe's! 19491 645·8873
THE CANNERY
Historic waterfront resteurent and harbor cruise center Hours.
Mon ·Sat 11 .30 • 2 em, Sun 10 am-1 2 pm, All major credit cards
Reservabons suggested Located at 3010 laf8'jette Ave., Newport.
Beach, CA 92663 !9491675-5777 Fax £949) 675-2510
AMELIA'S SEAFOOD &
ITALIAN RESTAURANT
For 39 years Amelia has been serving the local& and v1s1tors of
Newport Baeoh who cheNsh the finest in delectable pastas, hne
wines & exqu1s1te sea foods Sulset dJnDer is seived Sun thru Tturs
from 5:00 pm -6:00 pm Dinner daily Starting et 5 pm Lunch Fri
S8t: Sun from 11 ·30 am to 3 30 pm. &may btvooh from 10 00 am
-3 30 pm. 311 Manne Ave on Balboa Island 19491 673-6580.
THAI SPICE
Voted by ttle Register readers, as appeared in The Best of Orange
County section ea 'The Best Thal food In Orange Cotnty." Lunch.
dinner, catering & tekeout. NrJW OPEN IN IRVtNE, 15455 Jeffrey
Road Cet Irvine Center Dr.I 857-8424 Open everyday Sun. thru
Thurs, 11 em-9 30pm, Fri And Set 118fl'l-1 ()pm Alto located at
615 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa. l949l 548·4333
ROYAL THAI
Open 7 days e week Serving lunch & dlMef' daily 11 am • 3pm
Sunday· ThursdtJY. Dinner: 1a seMd 5pn • 1 ()pm Sunday-TIU'sday
Fn and Saturday open unt1111pm. loi:ated et 4001 W, Coast Hwy
19491 645 !THAil
GELATO CLASSICO
Serving It.alien Ice cream, amoott11es, gourmet ooffee, latte.
ospreno. lunch &ei'Wld deily ()pen 7 dlVfl 9 am • 10 pm located
at 2756 E. Coast Hwy Coron• Dal M~ 1948) 721-1160
DIVA
Oremetic prsse!Uuons of award·w1nn1ng, event garde cu alrle
aii*1Ce the thlet.riCal mood OI this f'88'8urft. UIYish dnwta 9tld 0
IMI weekend enterteinm9nt. makl th I 8 perfect l)Ott>theetre
deatl""'°" Mon-Fri lunch. Mon-Set Dmer: Sun ~ Theetnt
l.DC8tld It 600 Anton, between Pert Cetur Ind Ave of the Ma
17141 754-0600
'
Qbily Pilot
' . . . . date book '{hursdoy, Sts*mber 9, 1999 A 13
ShaW's 'Philanderer' has staYing power
SCR co-founder David Emmes directs George Bernard Shaw's 'The Philanderer' as relevant today as it was 100 years ago
ALEX Coa.w.N •
F eminism, vivisection and ,,
romance: it seems like an
odd couibination of ele-
ments with which to construct a
comJc play. But George Bernard
Shaw did exactly that in his
1898 work •The Philanderer,•
and South Coast Repertory folks
• are excited to bring the mix to
the stage.
•The Philanderer,• a play
about the avoidance of marriage
and the condition of the •new•
woman, starts previews today on
the Mainstage and opens on Fri-
day. Director David Emrnes, who
1S also one of the co-founders of
SCR, expects the com~y to res-
onate with contemporary audi-
ences.
•The play speaks with a very
strong relevance to today,•
Emmes said. The ideas Shaw dis-
cussed •are very much at issue
today. Women are still trying to
balance it out."
Shaw's plbt tells the story of •
Leanard C harteris, a man who
bas cooked up serious philosoph-
ical objections to marriage. In
lieu of such a stultaving union,
Charteris advocates the cultiva-
tion of •charming friendships.•
He skips from woman to woman
in keeping with this rakish out-
look.
Charteris eventµally encoun-
ters Julia Craven, however, and
this meeting tests his commit-
ment to the vocation of the phi-/
landerer. Julia is a "new·
woman, a woman who refuses to
belong to anyone -and is for
·1 tin ~·s Cl\
mriooked gem.~ .
~you becomi
more appredativi
of a playwrifd,
you get down to
the PlaYs that In
not~as
oftta, liut en no
l.Wriy."
DnW~
this reason
the most
attractive
lady Cbar-
teris has ever
encountered.
Emmes
feels tpat the
play has the
potential to
speak power-
fully to the
concerns of
today's soci-
ety, but that it
has to be
handled well
in order to
come across effectively on st.age.
·we want to deal with this not
as some museum piece,• Emmes
said. •we want to approach it in
a very dynamic and vital way.•
The details that make the dif-
ference, bringing Shaw's lan-
guage 'alive a hundred years
after it was written, reside in the
actors' efforts at characterizing
and embodying the roles they
~lay, Emmes said.
"It's a certain kind of physical
energy,• he said. "The body lan-
guage brings a kind of energy to
the play.
•While these are British char-
acters, we want to give them a
vitality and energy in pursuit of·
their actions that is truer to our
day" Ulan to the 19th century.
Characterization can be a
particularly tncky task when
dealing with a Shaw play
m
• .... •"'fhe
Ph~"~ ~a.mn :s ...
SouthCOMt
Repertoly. 655 f
Town Center Dri-
ve, c.a.t. Mesa .....
~0tt.io.
Pr •viftrJI Mi ~~ times are Tues-
~through Frl-daY at 8 p.m.,
Saturday at 2:30
and 8 p.m. and
Sunday at 2:30 ·
and 7:30 p.m. ·
+ HOWMUCH:
rickets are $28
to $47, $18 to
S37 for previews.
·p~whatyou
will for the
Sept. 11 mati-nee.
lenge in doing Shaw well, to
make sure that these are real
Oesh~and-blood characters.·
"The Philanderer• is one of
Shaw's less-produced plays,
dwarfed m popuJarity by works
like "Pygmalion• and "Ma1or
Barbara." But Emmes said he
believes it is deserves more
attention than it typically gets.
"I think it's tm overlooked
gem,• Emmes said. •As you
become more appreciative of a ·
,playwright, you·get down to the
plays that are not produced as
often, but are no less worthy.•
"The Philanderer,· be said, is
·just such a beast, •particularly
given the contempoTary rele-
vance of the issues that he's
exploring.•
For E!runes, who has co-
directed SCR since founding it
with Martin Benson in 1964, this
production has been the occasion
of some satisfied recollection of
his institution's growth over the
years.
more than h.15 degrees from .Har-
bor High School and OCC.
"I think it's been a great
dream realized,• Emmes sa.td ..
·"It's full to think back about how
far we have come and what a
welcoming place Orange County
hcts been.•
Ernmes had praise for the area
theatergoers who have supported
SCR dunng its evolution.
"It's dn audience that's very
dytiamic and open to new expe-
nences, • he said.
It's also an auclience that has
seen a lot of work by George
Bernard Shaw. SCR has pre-
sented more plays by Shaw
than by any other playwright
W1th the exception of Shake-
1:opeare.
Part of the appeal of Shaw.
Emrnt>.s noted, JS that in addition
to~the political concerns !hat
characterize his plays. he is also
able to create a fairly gripping
narrative.
+ PHONE: (714} ·
708-5555 SEAN Hlll!R/ DAILY PILOT
Actors KaiWn Hopklnl, left. and Nancy Bell rehearse lines from the South
Coast Repertory produdlon of "The Philanderer." ·
"Only in America can this
kind of Horc;ltio Alger dream still
be realized,• Emmes said, noting
that he began SCR with little
"There's good dramaturgy,•
Ernmes said. "There's good
storytelling. He can construct a
tale •
because bis protagonists will
occasionally begin to philoso-
phize and theorize lilce frenzied
graduate students. But h1S lines
won't come alive, Em.mes said,
unless the motivation behind
such speechifying is thoroughly
understood.
"Shaw is a playwright we
have always been drawn to
because of the tremendous wit
and intelligence he has m lus
plays,• Em.mes said, emphasizing
at the same time that "there's
T ec«:MpJT Sr T ulqJJT
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Our 3Sth AnnMnary Special.
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-A 14 Thursday, Sepeemb. 9, 1999 date book
Get back to basics with the -venerable Quiet Woman
D rive down Paci.fie Coast
Highway from Newport
Beach through Corona
del Mar and you'll notice quite a
few restaurants along the way. I
was able to count more than 30.
Many are new, ~nd some loca-
tions seem to sport a different
establishment every six months.
In fact, U you try and count the
restaurants that have been
around for 10 years or more, your
list wil\ dwindle quickly.
List the ones that have been in
the same spot fo"r 20 years or
more, and you might not need
more than one hand. Newport
diners are fickle and have plenty
of choices, DINING REVIEW and I've seen
many restau-
rants with
lines out the door weeks after
they open go dark not to long
after. Staying power in the
restaurant business is an illusive
quality, which makes it truly
remarkable that the Quiet
Woman, the venerable Corond
del Mar watering hole, will soon
be celebrating its 35th anniver-
Sdfy.
As a restduranl writer, 1 get to
try all the new trendy, hip restau-
rants week after week. nus isn't
d bdd thing, but its sometunes a
bit overwhelming sampling the
dtZzymg spectrum of new and
inventive cwsmes, served to look
more Ltke a piece or art then the
evenmg medl Restdurants have
')eemed to get louder and
tmghter and, especially here in
Newport Beach, I sometunes feel
hke I need to purchase a new
wardrobe al the Armaru store
before 1 can ventµre out.
Thdt the Quiet Womdn, is the
exdct opposite of all thdt is new
<1nd trendy 1s the mam reason. l
think, for its dppeal. We all like
to dress up m a new swt or dress,
but that old pdir or faded Jeans
with the holes m the knees are so
.Cl UBS
CLUB.MESA
Club Mesa offers hve music
every rught of the week except
Wednesduy, which 1s reserved for
d spoken word and poetry show
Club Mesa 1s at 843 W 19th St ..
Costa Mesa Call (949) b42-6634.
DURTY NELLY'S
Nell}'\ ofter-. II\" music at 9 p .m.
Friddys dncl Scllurdays d.Od IS at
2915 Red Hill Ave., Costa Mesd
For more mformallon, call (7141
957-1951
HARD ROCK CAFE
The Hard Rock offers live music
Sundays dnd is dt 451 Newport
Center Drive, Newport Beach.
For more informal.Jon, cdll (949)
b40-8844
THE HARP INN
The mn offers live music Thurs-
days through Saturdays and 1s at
130 E 17th St . Costa Mesa. For
more information, call (949) 646-
8855
HOGUE BARMICHAEL'S
Barrruchael's offers Live music
Wednesday~ through Saturdays
and is at 3950 Campus Drive,
Newport Bedch. For more mfor-
mdtion, cdll ('149) 261-6270.
MARGARITAVILLE
Margalitav1lle offe rs hv~ music
and ts at 2332 W Coast Highway,
Newport Bectch. For more infor-
mation, call (949) 631-8220.
MULDOON'S IRISH PUB
AND RESTAURANT
Muldr->n's offers lJve music
Thurjclays through Sundays and
· as at 202 Newport Center Olive,
Fashion Island, Newport Beach
Niki Smart plays today, and Rob
Eller is slated for Friday For more
information, call (71 4) 640~4110.
OYSTER BAR LOUNGE
Newport Landing's Oyster Bar
Lounge showcase local pop and
light rock acts Fndays and Satur-
day . The lounge is at 503 East
Edgewater at the Balboa Ferry
Landing. For more infonnallon,
C(lll (949) 675-2373.
PLANET HOLLYWOOD
Planet J lollywood offers live
musk Wednesdays and is at
South Coast Plazo. For more
infounation, caU (71.C) 668-14.CO,
TRIANON LOUNGE
Th lounge m th Sutton Plllcc
Hotel off en; live mu ic by th
Son bridge 8 nd on Saturd4ys at
9·30 pm. until closing. No C'over
char . Th hotel 15 at 4500
MacArthttr Blvd., N wport
Bcaeh. For mor Inf ormnUOn, oall
(949) 476-2001. '
much more comfortable. Walk
into the Quiet Woman and that
same relaxed, comforting feeling
settles over you. It's a dark place,
with wood paneling and shutters
~along.oak .
The restaurant lS basically one
large room divided m half, with
the bar on the left and the dining
room to the right. There's aJways
a good crowd in th~ bar enjoying
a post-work or pre-dinner cock-
taiJ.. or enjoying the live bands
that play Thursday lhrough Sat-
urday. On the weekends the
under-30 crowd can fill the room ·
pretty quic~y. but even this typi-
cally image-conscious set seems
more intent here on having a
good time than putting them-
selves on display.
Red leather booths add nostal-
gic warmth to the dining area,
and potted palms dot the perime-
ters. Faded pamtings of hunting
scenes give the place the feel of
an English pub, as does the logo
of the headless woman that
adorns the menu. The story goes
that the name comes from a 7th
century saint who, after being
·beheaded: picked up her head
and carried it to the alter.
The menu itself provides a
welcome contrast to the current
trend toward exotic ingredients
and artfully arranged food sp1Ies.
The extensive list is d throwback
to the days when grills such as
Musso & Franks were king, and
you'll find featured here cl\oice
Angus steaks, grilled chops and
fresh fish To be sure, there are
plenty ef modem touches, partic-
ularly evident in thP salads and
appetizers. ·
For mstance, the St. Tropez
salad ($9.95) combines shredded
chicken with watercress and
radicchio, all tosseq with a tangy
herb and goat' chee,se dressing.
I'm pretty sure this wasn't on the
menu 30 years ago, but it's a sat-
isfying Light entree nonetheless,
Other salads include the clas-
sic Caesar ($7.95) and an excel-
lent Cobb ($9.95) that is loaded
• WHA?. The Oui·
.etWOINn .... lllat
P9dfk Com Hlah-
Wll'/, Corona c:leT
Mar
• WHEN: lunch: Monday through
Friday, 11 :30 a.m.
to 2:30 p.m. Din-
ner: Sunday .
through Thu~ay. _.
5 to 10 p.m., Frielay
and saturday, s to
11 p.m. Late-night
menu served until
closing. + HOWMUOt:
Moderate
• PHONE: (949)
~7440
Chef Segundo
Esparza holdi up
the menu at The
Quiet Woman ln
Corona del Mar.
£RIC SANTUCCI I
DAILY Pit.OT
with mesquite-grillea chicken,
cri.Sp bacon and chunks of bleu
cheese.
Appetizers include the .
spinach phyllo ($5.25), a tasty
spinach and goat cheese mixture
wrapped m phyllo dough and
baked until cnsp. I also like the
roasted garlJc ($5), another nod
toward more modem influences.
The garlic IS roasted until soft,
bathed tn d good olJve oil and
served with plenty of toasted
bread slices to spread it on. It's a
tasty accomparument to a cold
marbm at the bar
All of the ap~ers are fea-
tured on the bar menu as are
The distinctive cuisine of Majorca - a blend of
the best of Spanish and Mediterranean flavors.
Serving Lunch and Dinner
Tapas
Paella VaJenclanas
Fresh Sedfood
Basque Style Grilled Meats
Fine Wines ~ Spirits
LJve guitar music Friday&. SaturdclY 7-11 p.m.
'
Rese~alions:
(949) i.51-9396
t 000 Bristol North (between Birch &. jamboree)
Newport Beach, CA 92660
Under New Ownership!
Full Bar
Guinness • Harp •. Bass '
Fosters • sOddin~on
• f
several excellent sandwiches that
are served until 11 p.m. My
favorite is the swordfish sand-
Wich ($10.50). The swordfish is
grilled over mesquite and served
on thick slices or warm Greek
bread with a zesty house tartar
sauce.
Of the plentiful selection of
entrees, I tend to favor the sim-
plest, such as any of the steaks
cooked on their mesquite gnll.
Rahhitt lmuralHl'
@__
AUl'O i HOMEOWNERS• BLUE CROS.S
~ ~ ~ c::;
"-" •.itl"-n..I•"''"""" ./ r\ ,''....)
949-631-7740 1 «I Old Newpon Blwl. • Newport Beach
(Nc:ar Hoag He»pical)
The baseball steak ($21.75), a 12
ounce center cut of top sirloin,
was cooked perfectly and rivaled
in flavor steaks I've had at some
of the better-known restaurants.
Other cuts include a London
broil mannated in citrus and
Worcestershire ($20.75), a gener·
ous 16 ounce T-bone ($20.75) '-
and an aged 12 ·ounce, New York
strip ($22.75). Lamb chops are
offered either marinated ($26.50), i
or as part of a full or half rack 1· ($36.50 and 22.50, respectively).
Several fresh fish specials are
offered nightly; I've tried the hal·
ibut and the escolar, both served
with a lemon caper sauce
($22.50). The halibut was over-~
cooked and too dry, but the esco-'
Jar I tried a few 'nights latel' was l
~rlocl •
The Quiet Woman features· an
excellent wine selection to
accompany your meaJ. I was
pleased with some of there hard-
er-to-find offerings, such as an
excellent DaVis Bynum pinot
noir.
I enjoy the relaxed, convivial
atmosphere at the Quiet Woman.
This is the place to come fcir
good conversation with four
close friends. The menu is famil-
iar dnd dependable, offering
good food that will compliment
your evening's enjoyment ~
out becoming the center of atten·
ti on.
A GREAT PLACE FOR A DATE
-"The New Tosftt Sensation In Chicken, Steolc & s.afooJ•
"The aromas of gorlic
& cilantro waft &
conversation hums
at lnka Grill"
{A TIMES
• Kevin fves '98
#Serving som.e of
the most innovative
foods around•
{05TAME$A
DAILY PILOT
.
A MacGillivra9 r-rccman r-ilm
~th.IMAAMOllM•~
on our-GIANT' 1/2 ~ .Screon ~the Mu.k of~ttemeon
Jn 1.2,000 ... ~Sound ......,ting,.. ••-'on~ u.. ~
• ..
.._ ..... ----· .... ,,.,..,. "' .. ___ ,.., .. __ ...,. ---··-... -·
'
community forum .
ThUtlday, 5ep1wnber 9, 1999 A 15
EDITORIAL
Ringffig. in a pronrtsing new School year -...
• DON UACH I DAILY Pl.OT
Wilson Elementary kindergarten teacher VirgtnJa Muchetto works with two students on their art
projects during the first week of school.
<
Harbor Day School
was a city mistake
I have just returned from a
summer vacation to confront
the massive, industrial-look-
ing concrete box that arose at
Harbor Day School. To fully
understand why this building is
U{>Setting to people, I encourage
aAyone to drive to the top . of
Sandcastle Drive and see what
Harbor View Hills South resi-
dents now view from their
homes.
The approval to build a
struciW'e too big fDr a site - a
structure that destroys the aes-
thetic balance of the community
-is a mistake forever repeated
by our city.
Apparently, the city notified
the minimum nwnber of nearby
residents by means of an
ilmocuous postcard describing a
proposed height variance and
gtneral plan amendment. How-
e er, current city laws do not
require staking as does Laguna
Beach and other aties. This is
wrong and should be urunedi·
ately corrected to allow the lay
public a chance to visualize the
three-dirn~nsional unpact of
proposed projects -such as the
Harbor Day gym before they
are irreversibly constructed in
our backyards.
Why wasn't Harbor Day
School required to have a
greater setback off the street so
it didn't appear to be towenng
O'Yer San Joaquin Hills Roadf
Old it not occur to anyone in
the city that approvmg a build-
ing of this size on that tiny bit
of land would present a prob-
lem when it was built? Doesn't
the Planning Commission and
the City Council have a duty to
communlcate with homeowners
8'd homeowner associations
about potential projects like this
!ey are informed of the con-
ences before it is too late?
es, the city appears to have
wed the strict letter of tho
But, nowhere was there
thought, planning or vtsion
blted by our elected and
apPotnted officials to protect afd preserve the charecter of
ow community.
. UZANNE WITTE
Corona del Miu
veil.story was
~;e,d and unfair
lb8 reporter wrtUng about
arrest of Dr. Steven Lovell
atc~ll)lilhed ptodudng one of
molt blued atoriu J have
read. Lumping Dr. Lovell
lb two Other men ac:cuaed of
le1ting women and With the
ote from the police, saying
thing like, •Tbeee men·
get whetever they want"
lrrelpoolible and shoddy.
We :have khc>wn St9Ye for at
a..t !5 JN11 and consider h1m
'
MAILBAG
' and his family to be friends. He.
bas helped my son, daughter,
wife and me with various chiro-
practic problems over the years,
with great results.
If it took a woman seven
'months to figure out that she
was molested, what could have
been on her mind? Being
adjusted, by a chiropractor, as
in any medical procedure
requires touching. If this is
uncomfortable ford person, he
or she should communicate this
to the doctor.
A person is innocent until
proved guilty, not the other way
around, as your article suggests.
When Steve is proven mnocent,
will the Pilot print that story on
the front page? A person's repu-
tation should not be taken so
lightly.
PATRICK AND
CHRISTINE SULLIVAN
Newport Beach
Reader gets it wrong
on lottery money
Marie Margaret's •Where's
all that money going?~ (Mail-
bag Aug. 31) letter concerning
money to the schools from the
Cahforrua lottery. Her assump-
tion that the lottery would solve
schools' money problems is .
exactly the reason why so many
school people vot~ against it.
Despite what many thought, the
lottery was never designed to
solve schools' financial woes ...
and it hasn't!
About 35% of the.lottery
sales income is evenly distrib-
uted to the schools on a per-stu-
dent basis, where it represJ?nts
a small portion of the district
budget. Actually, the amount
has ranged from a high of
almost 4% to a low of 2% in
1997-98, and it must be spent
for instructional purpose . Not
one cent can be spent on build-
ings that we need desperately!
Bond elections allow boards
of education to borrow money
to build schools. Mo t of us
need to take on a mortgage to
build our homes. Sirnllarly,
school districts raise the money
to build schools through the
ale of bonds, which have been
approved hy two-thirds of the
voters.
Virtually every distnct 1Jl
Orange County needs new
classrooms desperately to house
our steadily increasing enroll·
ment, which 1s now about
480,000 K-12 students -en
increase of 20,000 over lHt
yeorl
Board of eduC'ation members
uccommlttedtoprovidinga
clean, tetpecta ble and sat
learning environment tor every
madent at the lowest rou<>n·
able COit OW *J)OnslbWty to
thit and subMquent genera·
lioDI ii to provide th• edwOls
where that cen happen A.a
'
responsible community mem-
bers, we must do no less!
JOHN F. DEAN
Orange County supetintendent
of schools
More thoughts on El
Toro airport debatf1
Subscriber Linda Wooters' letter
Aug. 26 asked what next for
Newport Beach residents if the
proposed El Toro airport does
not happen?
It is likely that those people
who advocate.the need for
additional airport capacity any-
where m Orange County Will , ·
look to an expansion of John
Wayne. That is why the Safe &
Healthy Communities Initiative
is needed. It provides the resi-
dents of Newport Beach the
same protection against an
expansion of John Wayne that
opponents of El Toro have or to
those fighting against a large
jail site in their communities.
The voters of Orange County
should decide whether airports,
jails or toxic dwnps should be
built or ex-panded in their com-
munities. Such pro1ects should
only be built if approved by a
consensus -and not Just a sim-
ple majority -of the county
voters because of the significant
nsk that such projects may
cause to the affected communi-
ties.
While I am opposed to an air-
port at El Toro, I share Wooters'
fear_ and concern that an unnec-
essary and unpopular expan-
sion plan for John Wayne will
be approved by the board of
supervisors that does not reflect
the will of the people. Our mea-
sure will protect her and keep
our 'communities safe and
healthy.
JEFF MffiGER
LaQ'Fa Hills
ln the matter of UJe airport at
El Toro, some questions need to
be asked. Fust, I have lived in
N wport for 20 years, and own
busmcs cs in Lake Forest. The
que tion are the e, and they
are for those, particularly m
N wport Beach, who favor an
airport at El Toro.
Do you really believe that
more flights will como to John
Wayne if th county upervisors •
vote against Ill
Do you really behevc that
noise ls in any way a major
Is ue m the proposed airportl
Do you roolly believe trust an
alrport at El Toro will, as some
proc1alm, reduce trattlc around
the El Toro ·v·t
Do you really believe that
some rich guy• on a very Mdud·
ed t~1and ln the harbor would pour mllllons into the plan for a
new alrport. oh. just because
he'I a •good guy?"
Coukt.ll be tbat you really
don't know what an allport
...
I t'.s both eerie and exciting at the same
time.
The students who will be part of
Newport-Mesa's last school year of the
20th century will march onto iocal cam-
puses today.
It's a historic footnote, and there will
be the ever-present media spotlight,
recording their victories and their stum-
While Supt. Robert Barbot has sug-.
gested ways, like selling off a school
property, what really may need to hap-
pen is for trustees to go to the members
of the public and ask them to open up ·
their wallets and support a bond to help
classrooms.
bles along the way. ·
But just as the school year ties into the
end of both a triumphant as well as trag.1
ic 100 years, it is the beginning of what
we all hope is a bright and bountiful
millennium.
Not an easy task in Newport-Mesa.
And speaking of challenges, try
reopening a long-closed school.
District officials, who succeeded in
doing just that with Lincoln Elementary
in Corona del Mar several yea.rs ago, are
looking for a The 300 students who will
attend the school, which underwent $5.3
million in renovations, will be graced T . It's truly a new start for Newport-
Mesa's 21,000 students, their parents,
teachers and the rest of the district staff.
It's a chance for school officials to
renew efforts to tackle the many chal-
lenges they face this year and beyond.
with fresh new surroundings as well as a
state-of-the-art m~center with 30
computers.
Those challenges span the spectrum
from budget woes to Stanford 9 test
scores, each deserving of top priority.
But what must weigh the heaviest on
the minds of the Newport-Mesa school
board leaders is the festering problem of
how to pay for repairs f9r decaying
schools.
And if that's not enough to worry
about, there will be more questions
about school salety and whether or not
it's time to leave ·the district's l_ong-stand-
ing zero tolerance policy in the 20th cen-
tury and start anew with a better policy
in the 21st.
The price tag for that-$127 million.
And the trustees must find a way ~o
come up with the cash.
The students who will start school
today represent ciur future. We all hope
the next millennium holds for them both
success and happiness, and that their
achievements will be ones for the history
books.
does to a community? You don't
know about Schiller Park, Stone
Park, Rosemont, Bellwood? You
don't know about Century
Boulevard, Mannheim Rodd,
River Road or the Pomona Free-
way around the Ontario airport?
HOW TO CONTACT
YOUR REPRESENTATIVES
Do you really believe that
the county gen~ral plan will'
protect the local eorrununittes
from sunilar destruction? Count
the number of .plan amend-
ments, variationj and deviations
that have alreddf ~fm
arranged in the county plan.
PRESIDENT
Bill Clinton, (0), White House,
1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Wash-
ington, D.C., 20500.
fiotline (6 a.m. to 2 p.m.) (202)
456-1111
E-mail:
president@whitehouse.gov
Fax: (202) 456-2461 .
VICE PRESIDENT
Al Gore, (D), Capitol B g,
Swte 212, Washington, D.C.,
20500
E-mail: vice.president@white-
house.gov
Fax: (202) 456-2461
GOVERNOR
Gray Davis, (0), State Capitol,
Sacramento 95814, (916) 445-
2841; fax: (916) 445-4633
Finally, let the goofy New-
port Beach City Council be
aware that there is sanity in the
community and it will oppose
the airport, primarily because
the whole truth about this mis-·
adve'nture has not been told
and the $600,000 alreddy spent
on this foolishness could have U.S. SENATORS
been put to a much better use. •Barbara Boxer, (D), 112 Hart
RICHARD SPEHN Senate Building, Suite 112,
Corona del Mar Washington, D.C., 20510, (202)
Newport commercial
site should stay same
224-3553; or 2250 E. Imperial
Highway, Swte 545, El Segundo
90245, (310) 414-5700
E-mail:
senator@boxer.senate.gov
My comment concerns the •Dianne Fem.stem. (D), 331 Hart
Irvine Co.'s possible purchase of Building, Waslungton, D.C ..
the commeraal site, situated at 20510, (202) 224-3841; or 11111
the intersection of Newport . Santa Monica Blvd· Sw.te 915,
Coast Drive and San Joaqwn ...._. Los Angeles 90025, (310) 914-
Hills R d 7300 oa · . E-mail: senator<itfeinstein.sen· If the Irvme Co., or any .~ther ate.gov
developer is permitted to ~uild
apartments, rest assured the
deosion is based on •negative
impact,~ that will never be dis-
cussed openly by the county or
the city of Newport Beach.
Should the oty of Newport
fail to annex Newport Coast. the
city would lose significant sales
tax revenue µiat would likely be
generated in shoppmg co~
such as those where Bristol
Fanns, Gelsons and Albertsons
are located. This is both a short-
term and long-term concern to ·
the city of Newport Beach. The ·
best scenano for tho entire site 1s
a retail complex. Not a~ nts.
Poor planrung deosion.s always
seem to rusve an economic
upside to one of the pJoyer...
M.A. GILLETT£
Newport Coa t
Businesses should be
able to display goods
I am commenting about th
Daily Pilot'& over enf orc m nt
issues. I understand th d1fhcul·
ties the dty has regardmg th
liability iuue, but it is more
important the dty 1how its
Charm and allow thll merChan-
dite lo be seen ouma of their
propertl . It Is very pleuant to
the ye and that Should be our
concern for our own community.
l.et the U.bWty lnue be Mttled
among insUranCe oompu\les
and •\JOmeYI Leave that out
I.At's enjoJ ow dty.
MAlt11N STUKA
COrona cs.I Mar
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
•Chris Cox, (R). 47th District. 1
Newport Place, Swte 420, New-
port Beach 92660, (949) 756·
2244; or 2402 Rayburn Building,
Washington, D.C., 20515, (202)
225-56111 fax (949) 251-9309
(Represents most of Newport
Beach)
E-mail.
christopher.cox@mail.house.gov
• Dana Rohrabacher,-(R), 45th
D1Strtct, 101 Main St .. Suite 3C,
Huntington Beach 92648, (714)
960-6483; or 2338 Rayburn
Building. Washington, D.C., (202)
225-2415: fax: (714) 960-7806
(Represents Costa Me:i;a and
W~t Newport)
E-mail: dana maiJ.hou!f .gov
STAT£ SENATE
Ross Johnson (R), 35lh D1 trtct,
18552 MacArthw Blvd., Sw~
395, Irvine 92715, (949) 8.13·
0180, fax: (949) 833-<>696
STATE ASSEMBLY
Matilyn Brew r (R). 10th District,
18952 Mac-Arthw Blvd., Sult
220, ltvine 92715, (949) 863·
7070. E-mail·
a70@a3Sembly.ca.gov
STATE COASTAL COMMISSION
45 FremonfSt., Swte 2000, San
Francisco 94105, (415) 904-5200;
regiondl office located m Long
.. ~ach, (310) 590-5071
ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF
SUPERV1SORS
Hall of Adnurustration, 10 Civic
Center Plaza, Santa Ana 92701
• Jun Silva, 2nd Distnct (Costa
Mesa), (714) 834-3220
• Thomas Wilson. 5th District
(Newport Beach. Santa Ana
Heights), (714) 834-3550
ORANGE COUNTY FAIR BOARD
88 Fair Dnve,.Costa Mesa. (714\
708-FAJR
Board. President Emily Sanford;
Vice President Don Saltarelli;
and members Gary fiayakawa,
Jun Lindberg, John Crean,
Randy Snuth, Don Willet. Curt
Pringle and James Barich.
ORANGE COUNTY BOARD
OF EDUCATION
200 Kalmus Dnve, P.O. Box 9050,
Costa Mesa 92628-9050, (714)
966-4000 ElizabetQ D Parker,
member, Trustee Area 5 Costa
Mesa. Newport Beach
OTY OF COSTA MESA
Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair
Dnve, 92626, (714) 754-5223
Mayor: Gary Monahan
CoWlcil: Joe Erickson, Heather
SOmer5, Libby .Cowan and Linda
Dixon
OTY OF NEWPORT BEACH
Newport Beach Ctty Hall, 3300
NewpCl't Blvd. 9266.1. (949} 644;3300
Mayor: Dennis O'Neil ~
Council: Gary Adams, Jan
Debay, Norma Glover, Tod
Ridgeway, Jobn Noyes and Tom
Thomson
COAST: COMMUNITY
COU.EGE DISTIUCT
District Offic 1370 Adams Ave.,
Costa Mesa 92 26, (714) 432-5898
Chancellor. Willi m M . Vega
Board: Walt r Rowald, Sheny
Baum, Paul B rg , Armando
Rwz and Jerry Patterson
NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIED
SOfOOl OtSTRK:T
D trid Office: 2985·A Beu St.,
M 92626, (714) 424-5000
Superintendent: Robert Barbot
Board· Dana Black, Judy Franco,
Jan Penymetn, Mllrtha Fluor,
Wendy Leece, ren Stok and
David Brooks
)
. . . ' "
A 16 lhuridoY, ~ 9, 1999
' . arotuid town . . . . . .
• Send ~ TOWN 1ttmS to the
Daily Pilot. 330 W. Bay St., Cort.a Mesa
92627; fax them to (949) 646-4170; °'
call (949) 642·5680, Ext. 228, A compl«te
listing of AROUND TOWN may be
found at dailypilot.com.
TODAY
The Newport Harbor Area
Charo~r of Commerce has tnvit·
ed seminar leader 'and author
Rhonda Britten to speak about
overcoming the fear of selling at a
networking luncheon at noon at
the Sutton Place Hotel, 4500
MacArthur Blvd., Newport
Beach. Cost is $15 with a reserva-
ijon and $20 at the door. 'For more
information, call (94~) 7,29-4400.
An Investment workshop will be
held from noon to 1 p .m. at
Salomon Smith Barney, 650 Town
Center Onve, Costa Mesa. ·Pre·
senters Jason Sher, Don Harrell,
Ken South and Ralph Dillon. all
financial consultants, will focus
on building a stock portfolio -
how someone can start and what
they should buy. For more infor·
mation, call (714) 957-6500.
A craft and sewing festival will be
held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
Building 10 of the Orange Coun·
ty Fairgrounds. Admission is $7
.for adults, children 12 and under
are free. For more information,
call (801) 463-1200.
The Pacific Coast Quarter Horse
Show will run today and Friday at
the Orange County Fair & Expo·
sition Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
(714) 708-1654.
Hodson Lighting
Open Tuts..fri Q.5, Sc1t. 9·4
1510 Newport Blvd , (' osld Mesd
Qualit) li1h1in1 ">er\iH for 30 Yeara
. (949) 548·9341
The Ebell Club of Newport
Beach will meet at 11:30 a m. at
the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club,
1601 Bayside Drive, Newport
Beach. Participants may play
bridge, bingo or anyth.U)g else
they enjoy. For reservations, call
(949) 721-9267
FRIDAY
A craft and sewing festival will
be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
Building 10 of the Orange Coun-
ty Fairgrounds. Admission is $7
for adults, free for children 12
and under. For more information,
call (801) 463-1200.
SATURDAY
Upper Newport Bey Natu.rallst.s
Will hold a free ~pfire program
at 7::J(\p.m. at the Fish and Game
headquarters on Shellmaker
Island. Pete Femia from the B~
of Prey Center will talk about
raptors and bring several owls
and hawks for viewing. For more
in.formation. call (949) 786-8878.
A craft and sewlng festival will
be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in
Building 10 of the Orange Coun·
ty Fairgrounds. Admission is $7
for adults, children 12 and under
are. free. For more information,
call (714) 108-1654.
The Pacific Coast Quarter Horse
Show will be presented at the
Oral}ge County Fair & Exposition
Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information, call
(714) 708-1654.
The OASIS Senior c.aeer, at lbe
comer of 5th and Narcissus,
Corona del Mar, Will hold a
breakfast from 7:30 to 10 a.m.
The center will serve bluebeny
cllld .. regular pancakes, sausages,
orange juice and coffee. The
event is held the second Satur·
day of each month. Cost is $2 for
adults and $1 for children.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., president
of the WaterKeeper Alliance, Will
speak to the Orange County
CoastKeeper about the keeper
role in Orange County at 11 a.m.
over lunch at \he Hyatt New·
porter. Kennedy also will ouWne
the ways citizens can be active in
the group's .success. Cost is $40.
For more information, call (949)
723-5424.
SUNDAY
"A Brass Fanfare," featuring
mus1dans from the Pacific Sym·
phony Orchestra's brass section,
at 3 p.m. will launch the Newport
Beach Public Llbrary's Sunday
Musicales, running from late
summer through spring. The
Newport Beach Central Llbrary
is at 1000 Avocado Ave. For more
information, call (949) 717 ·3801.
The grand opening of Adult
Day Services of Orange County,
a state-of ·the-art center spe·
cializing in Alzheimer's and
dementia care, will be held
from 2 to 5 p.m. Adult Day Ser·
vices of Orange County is at
9451 Indianapolis Ave., Hunt·
ington Beach. For more infor·
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•
matio~ call (714) 593-9630.
• Tbe Pacific Coast Quarter Hone
Show will be presented at the
Orange County Fair & Exposition
Center, 88 Pair Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information, tall
.(71•) 708-1654.
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church will sponsor a family
neighborhoOd picnic from noon
to 3 p.m. at Mariners Park OJ} the
comer o! IJVine Avenue and;
Dove Street. Thete will be face "
painting, games, an air jwnp for
children and a Dixieland band.
-Cost for food and drinks is $1. For
more information, call (949} 631·
2880.
Save ~rystal Cove, an alllance of
community groups opposing the
proposed resort at the .cove is
holding an event from 1 to 4 p.m.
at the Historic Cottage District.
The event will feature tours,
exhibits, music and will help peo·
ple learn how they can make
sure Crystal Cove rem.a.ins a pub-
lic park. For more more informa·
tion,call(949)494-5690.
MONDAY
The Pad.fie Coast Quarter Horse
Show will be presented at the
Orange County Fair & Exposition
Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa
Mesa. For more information, call·
(714) 708-1654.
TUESDAY
Alliance Funding, a leader ln the
mortgage iildustry, will sponsor a
'
free educational seminar for
busin.ess partners, bankers and
lending personnel from 9 a.m. to
noon in the Mesa Verde room at
the Westin, 686 Anton Blvd, Co5·
ta Mesa. The program, led by Bill
Evans, i5 designed to help raise
awareness and appreciation of
the new skills needed for success
in the mortgage industry. A con·
tinental breakfast will precede
the seminar from 8 to 8:•5 lt.m.
Alliance Funding welcomes
donations from participants. For
more infonnation, call (800) 524·
2191, Ext. 3789.
WEDNESDAY
Financial ExecuUves lnstitute's
(PEI) loCal chapter will meet at 6
p.m. at the Center Club, 650
Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
FEI will get together to listen to
Anaheim Mayor Tom Daly speak
about the new Anaheim Resort
and its impact on Orange Coun·
ty. Cost is "$40 to becoD\I? a mem·
ber of FEl. For more information,
call (714) 578-9474.
SEpt 16 .
The Newport Beach Central
Llbra.ry's Parent-Son Book Club
meets at 7 p.m. Boys in fifth and
sixth grades are invited to partic-
ipate along with a parent or
guardian. The club meets the
third Thursday of every month.
The Newport Beach Central
Llbrary is at 1000 Avocado Ave.,
Newport Beach. To register, or for
more infonnatiolli call (949) 717 •
3807.
. .
Daily Pilot
SEPT. 17
Tat':::bi classes are offered frolil
10:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the OalW
Seruor Center. Tai chi is the g~n·
Ue way to fitness with slow,
flowing movements that can be
done by anyone of any age or
physical ability. No special
equiP.!{lent or attire is required.
The fee is $43. Registration is
ongoing. To register or for more
information, call (949) 644·3244.
The California Congress Q~r·
ter Horse Show will be preseft·.
ed today through Sunday 19 in
the Equestrian Center at tfte
Orange County Fair & BXJ>Ofi· ·
lion Center, 88 Fair Drive, C04ta
Mesa. For more information, cpll
(702) 242-3344. 1 ·
SEPT, 18
The 15th annual CaUfo~ia
Coastal Cleanup Day-will be
held from 9 a.m. to noon at mare
than 600 s1tes on state beach+s.·
ays, rivers, creeks, parks, road·
sides and highways. To vol •
teer or for more information,_c
Mark Patrick at (949) 509·66 .
A workshop titled "Divorce: A
New Beginning" will be p •
sented from 10 a.m. to 12: 0
p.m. at the offices of Maxine B.
Cohen, 180 Newport Center Ori·
ve, Suite 180 A, Newport BeaG}l.
Admissjon is $40. For mote
information, call (949} 644·64l.5.
Investigations & Collections
Specializing in $.kip Tracing
& Asset Searches
Specializing in collection
of Court, J udgrncnts. Bad Checks & Bad Debt
Service of Process, Legal
Documents & Court Filings
Service Available in All 52 States
800-448-7505
For reservations and information, call
9.f 9 644-6672
*M:i~~ge $1/nnnutr !It race ~1te, $70/Hr ot $451112 hour at the Spa
200 Newport Center Drive• Next to Muldoon's
'" Whatever your
Landscape or
Maintenance
needs, Lloyd's
can do it all. ..
' ... llldays.
w.. ...... _
.,nday, september 9, 1999 • Spotjs Editor Roger Carlson • 949-57 4-4223
FOOTIALL
Tars kick off tonight
............... rs ...... ,_
.CSModlf-.7p.m. ..... ,.,...,"
....... c... .....
.. NMpcrt tWbor. 7 p.m. ....... ..,.,
S1dll11Mid1 w. COllll .....
at Or.,. eo.ist Cotlege, 7 p.m. .• COetll ..... .., ., ,...,..JC ..... occ vs. Fuu.m.
at Fullerton CoHege, 7 p.m.
~~byJ
DAU PaOT SUION ltlaMD
'"' • 11~ (J4.S) tll7 . 91."-(Jl..J-1)
tlll -8'%(J7-45)
1"5 ·M %(J6.4)
t9M . 83% (36-J..1) ~ HWR I OAlt.Y Pl.OT
Sophomore Brian Gaeta starts at quarterback.
•Newport Harbor has won Orange
County-best 10 season openers in a
row, and Sailors look to continue tl).e
winning trend. against the Panthers.
BARRY fAUL.t.NER
I
NEWPORT
BEACH -What do
a Dodgers playoff
victory, an NBA title
for the Lakers and a
season-opening loss
for the Newport
Harbor High football
team have in •
common? None
have occurred in the 1990s.
The Sailors have won a Newport-~esa Dis-
trict-and school-record 10 debut contests
heading into tonight's 7 o'clock nonleague
matchup with Orange at El Modena High
The skein of successful openers is currently
tops in Orange County, since Edison had it's
10-game streak snapped last fall. What's
more, Coach Jeff Brinkley's Tars have wo~ 20
in a row against teams outside the Sea View
t eague.
Orange, under second-year head man
Kevin Capps, is looking to snap a streak of sig-
nificantly less distinction, as the Panthers
come in without a victory in their last 13
games.
SEE SAILORS PAGE 82
r COM .CHALLENGED-! Hefty fullback Mietkiewicz .. ~-----.:r..----------,
I provides supreme challeng~
for undersized Sea King
' defense in tonight's opener.
8ARHV l•i\u t"'I R
NEW-
p 0 R T
BEACH
Corona del
Mar High
football
coach Dick
Pree man
hasn't done
the math.
But, after witnessing some suspect Sea
King tackling m Frtday's scrimmage
against Villa Park, h e realizes Marina's
235-pound senior fullback Ray
Mietkiewicz proVldes an imposing
challenge in tonight's 7 o'clock non-
league opener at Newport Harbor
High.
The logistic breakdown is not
encouraging for the CdM defense.
Mlet.kiewicz, a two-time All-Sunset
League performer, has amassed 2,369
yards m two seasons, including 1,549
yards and 15 touchdowns last fall. As
the primary weapon in the Vtkings'
veer attack, he will, most likely, break
. the line of scrimmage When he does
crack the CdM front four, he'll enjoy an
average of a 56-pound advantage on
CdM's hnebackers and defensive
ERJC SANTUCCl/OAlY Pll.OT
SEE SEA KINGS PAGE 84 Corona del Mar's Jay Bottom is primed and ready for tonight's 1999 no_nleague opener.
-Old~school showdown
Saddleback, with Dean of Orange County coaches, Jerry Witte,
• in his 26th season, provides solid opening test for Costa Mesa. •
BARii¥ h\l' I.KM R
fl»t Not
COSTA MESA -
When Jerry Witte
began his' coaching
career at Saddleback
Jiigh, R1dde1l, not
:Nike, produced the
football footwear of
ChOlCO, dlSC'O was still
rumor and Sylv · ter
StalJone's Rocky had
yet to be<'ome a cultural 1con.
S?, when Costa Mesa H1gh's nonleague sea·
son opener 8gamst the Roadrunners kicks off
Friday at 7 p .m. at Orange Coast College,
Coach Jerry I lowell and his Mustangs can
expect an old-school struggle.
When it• comes to offensive innovation, the
Mustangs have been more nostalgic than new
wave the last few seasons. But Howell spent the
off -season Insisting his newly inltalled pro set
would relnttOduce the forward pus to Mustang
rooters th1 fall.
NNrly haU (13) of Mesa'• 29 plays ln Satur-
day'• ldimrn&g with calvary Chapel were
~ for the a11Ways and Mustang quarter·
b8clcs Dave Weir and Patrick H~ ftgure to
...
test Saddleback's three-man secondary.
· But with its frequent-flier program still in
development, the Mustangs, ranked third in
CIF Southern Section 01vtsion IX, will need to
rely on the mashmouth running game which
led them to a school-record three straight trips
to the CIF playoffs.
Mesa, 6-5 a year ago, but hoping to halt a
two-game losmg streak, Will rely on junior Ari-
zona transfer C.J. ZumgA. ~ .wc.U ~_gnior
reserve Greg Stewart, to pearhead the running
game at tailback.
JunJor Antony Grub1s1ch. a 260-pound bat·
tenng ram, will open at fullback, though Zuni-
ga will spell him when Stewart, the PCL chtun-
plon last spring at t 00 and 200 meters, enters
the lineup. ..
Weir, who completed 17 of 54 for 383 yards
and three touchdowns as a junior, gets the start·
ing assignment. 'l\vo 9f his three completions
againtt Calvary Chapel went for touchdowns.
Hulliger, a Junior, completed 3 of S for one
TD m the scrimmage end, Howell says, will see
some action under center.
Senior Shaun Ferryman, an All·Padftc Coast
League tight end last f aU. shifts to wide recelv·
er, Where he~ with Louil O.y to lonn a tall
end talented pau-catchlng tandem .• Botb
SEE MUSTANGS M• D
QUOTE Of THI DAY
'Wt ;at m to~~ cnt Friday Mr •
""' plly for ,. ...•
Mike Taylor, OCC football coach
Doily Pilot Bl
CELEBRATING THE MILLENNIUM
T ERSE
Corona del Mar
•When it comes to women's golf, you'll have to a long
way in any direction to find someone to challenge her.
RIOIARD DUNN was invented in the first place by
this sports section two years ago .
The large margins of victory by
I n.what will always be the ladies champions created
remembered as one of mterest m a one-day community
the great goU feats o( showdown -and Towersey has
our time, Marianne proved to be up to the ta5k in the
Towersey of Santa Ana Fletcher Jones Motorcars/Daily
Country Club gave competitive Pilot Club Champ1onshlp Series.
play a new definition this ln the 1970s, Towersey
summer. became disenchanted wtth the
A longtime dub champion prospects of playing on the
and former top-ranked Junior in LPGA Tour and decided to focus
the nqtion, Towersey pulled off on her career and family But
an amazing doubleheader m a after an eight-year hiatus from
scheduled 54-hole bout Aug. 13, goU. she returned to the game
beginning Wlth the 36-hole and, while pregnant with her
match-play final in the Women's · second son, Patrtck, won the
Southern California ir":WM~jllt· 1981 worlien's sta~e Gou ~sociation amateur
event at Mission Vie10 championship.
Count.r7tC1ub, then ·Once I met my
concluding with husband (Bnan), he
the Tea Cup Classic was interested in
-an 18-hole, playing golf and we
made-for-Daily Pilot purchased my
exhibition at Mesa parents' membership,
Verde Country Club. and there I was, back
Even with a at Sdnla Ana Country
foreign p~tter and 35 Club: said e latest
holes of competitive member of the Daily
goU already in her · Pil,ot Sports Hall of
bag, Towersey Marianne Towersey Fame celebrating the
captured the third millenruwn.
annudl Tea Cup Classic by seven Towersey is lhree
strokes in an unheard-of effort club chcilllp1onships away from
that will forever hve in local goU breaking the area's all-time
Jore. record of 17, held by Newport
The reigning queen of the B~ach Country Club's Dee Dee
White, a Daily Pilot Sports Hall links in the Newport-Mesa of Farner who won her first title commuruty, Towersey won her second straight Tea Cup Classic m t 961 at age 37 and her last at the club in '86. title in 1999, but solidlfied her As if Towersey wasn't
place as a Hall of Farner long prominent enough at Santa Ana
ago, l)aving won 15 of the last 18 Country Club, her family has a
women's club championships at nch history there Her
Santa Ana Country Club -an grandfather. Richard Emison,
ongoing dub record for the was among the onginJil SACC
oldest club in Orange County. members when the club was
A Corona del Mar High located at the .Castaways.
graduate and Stanford history Erruson ·is also the club's only
major, Towersey grew up playing three-u.me president.
Santa Ana, and, at age 16, Towen.ey's late father,
defeated future LPGA Hall of Alvtn, ts a Conner President's
Farner JoAnne Carner (nee Cup champion at Santa Ana,
Gunderson) in the first round of wtule her mother. Pat Cox is
match play at the 1967 U.S a Cour-tmle women's club
Women's Amateur and went on champion there, wmning titles
to the quarterfinals. Gunderson m 1947, 1952, 1961 and 1962.
would capture five U S. Amateur Her husband has won Sarita
titles in her career. including Ana c;eruor club titles while her
1966 and '68. A recent issue of son, Chad, has won Santa Ana
GOU World magazine included 1uruor club championships She
Towersey's Victory over has two sons, Chad, who turns
Gunderson as one of the 20 this month, and Patnck. 18.
counby's 10 greatest upsets this TheY. live m Newport Beach.
century. Towe~ey, who has one career
Towersey, who won the 1999 hole m one, played volleyball,
Santa Ana women's club title by tenrus and golf at Cdf\.1 High,
36 strokes after shooting a and goU and tennis. at Stanford.
four-round 307, was a primary •she's one helluva an athlete,•
reason why the Tua Cup Classic Brian Towerser said.
TENNIS
Davenport escapes, moves into semis
FLUSHING, N Y -Defending champion Und ay Davenport of
Newport Beach SUJ'VlVed two match pomls and fmally lipped past
fifth-seeded Mary Pierce, 6·2, 3·6, 7-5, Wedn day today to move into
the semifinals of the U.S Open.
Davenport will next play Friday again t th wtnner of th Monica
Sel -Serena Williams'qua.rtertinal, whil M rtina Hingis and Venus
Williams will battle in the oth r semifinal match al Flushing Meadows.
Pierce broke Davenport and rved for th match, le dmg, 5--4 , m the
third set. One pouit from de! t, Davcnpon nppcd a backhand cross-
court that ju:.t got a piece ot th d<ilin 1 ext ndmg lh mat h
After sUTVlvmg a second matdl point for l>i , Davenport finally
broke through on the 12th point, vcnlng th m tch at 5-5.
· That brought on the ta.in, sendmg the pla rs lnto th c1reS ing room
for 70 mihut .
, When both player returned, Da nport h d rv to_ lead; 6-:5.
before breaking Pi rce to wm.
_ ~ Thur.day. Sopoombo. 9. 1999 , Sports.
Bucs looking for som~ .revenge Saturday nigft
MARIANNA DAY MASSEY I OAt.Y I'll.OT
Tony Leone ls bllled as one of Orange Coast College's major
targets for the Pirates' opener at Fullerton Saturday night.
• OCC looks to improve
an already impressive
opening-day record
against host Fullerton.
To1w ALTOOl.!UJ
FULLER 4
TON -Going
by the record
books, it's
Orange Coast
College's tum
against host
Pullerton Sat·
urday al 7 p.m. in the 1999 foot-
ball season opener.
Since 1993, the Pirates and
Hornets have gone back and forth
in the series, with no team win-
ning twice in a row since OCC
repea1ed m 1992 and '93. .,
Pirates Coach Mike Taylor said
both he and lu.s team are looK.ing
forward to Saturday's matchup.
"We just want to get Thursday
and Friday over with and play for
real,•. Taylor said. "We're pretty
upbeat and we're excited about
getting this thing going.
"I was extremely pleased with
our overall effort in Friday's
scrimmage against Santa Moni-
ca,• Taylor continued . "Obvious-
ly, there were some mistakes
made with certain little things
and we've spen~ the week cor-
re~g them and makulg adjust-
ments.•
With both teams ranked near
the bottom last year in both rilsh·
ing and JM!.ssing defense, look for
both teams to be aggressive
offensively.
With an entire returning back-
field, including quarterback Jared
Flint and running backs Raymond
Ohrel, Devon Griffin and Jimmie
Banks, the edge on offense
should go to 'the Pirates.
Ohrel (Newport Harbor High)
showed the moves, power and
speed or a top-notch running
back during Fnday's scrimmage,
while Flint has the natural ability,
tremendous arm strength and a
year of starting at this level under
his belt.
Another thing in OCC's favor
is that it's the operung game. Or
maybe not.
In 50 years of football at OCC,
the Pirates have an impressive 30-
18-3 record in opening-day
games, but have lost six straight
openers, including last year's 34-
24 loss to the Hornets.
Leading tne offense for the Hor-
nets is sophomore running back
Prescott Hill. He ran for 79 yards
against the Pirates last season and
was a first-team All-Mission Con-
ference selection as a running
back and kickoff returner.
"He's a very good player and
he's someone we're definitely
keeping an eye on,• Taylor said.
With the departure of Kevin
Rodriguez, quarterback GrE!g
6
A SENSE OF URGENCY
Estancia has only one
item on wish list for the
season opener against
Magn~lia: a vi ctory.
B \HR\ l•\l 11\M H
IXWf l1lot
NEWPORT.
BEACH
Estdncia High
football COdCh
Dave Perkins
doesn't believe
Friday's 7 p m.
season-opening
nonledguC! cldsh with Maunoha at
Newport Harbor l-hyh is dbout
working out the kinks or amwenng
any lingenng personnel questions.
·we need to wtn, • '>did Perkins,
entering his second season after a
lamentable 1-9 debut campaign.
The Edgles, wtth seven retum-
111g starters on offense dJld si.x on
defense, mdy be poised to do 1ust
that, alter sharpening thcu game
with d full-contact camp m June, a!>
well as lac;t week'c; scrimmage· with
Orange
"Look mg dt the (scrimmage)
film, I thought we did a pretty got;>d
JOb. • Perkins said •we made some
mistdkcs. but our intensity was
good and I liked the way our guys
respondrd to advl'.'rs1ty when
Oranqe scored early (an estunated
~0-yard touchdown run on the sec-
ond play) We've nad plenty of tune
to evaluate; we nee(,i to stdrt getting
some W's ·
The Edgles chd not ~xP<•ncnce
victory m their final <,1x game., la'>t
fall, but did add sedsonmu for a host
·OI sophomore<, and 1uniors who
~ompnsc thtS y{•cU's leader..,
Among those tc; dn offen'>l\ c tine
which return., tnld<:l, though JUn!or
Ce~ar Romero has moved from
guard to tackle and Josh Vedch
from tackJe to guard. Senior lackJe
X'yle Westman, a second-team All-
Paetfic Coast League selection last
(all, anchors the front waU, which
will attempt to crectte running room
I-Or some talentc-d backfield new-
comers.
Marshall Hendncks, a seruor
transfer from Edison, is expected to
be the featured ballcamer Uus sea·
son He nussed a practice, however,
and will not-start.
Senior Sean Freeman starts at
wingback, with juruor receiver
Andy Romo moving to tatlback to
fill m for Hendricks, who, Perluns
srud, is expected to play.
Seruor Matt Muelle r starts al
fullback, where junior Fahad Jahid
will also see action. Mueller is the
leading rusher among returners,
having gained 111 yards m 39 car·
nes as a Junior
Jeremy VaJdes earns the nod at
quarterback., but is expected to
share time with fellow 1uruor Kenny
Valbuena.
VaJbuena earned seeond-tearn
aU-leag.ue honors dfter throwing for
1, 154 yards and eight 'touchdowns
(89 for 215) in eight starts last fdll .
He transfe rred to Fountain Valley
and practiced Wlth the Barons in
the spring and .summer. He
returned to Estancia after three
days of fall drills, but Perkins has
opted to reward Valdes for hls off-
season work.
Valdes is also belter-suiteq to
pose a ground threat m the Ea~
wmg T. He compJeted three passes
for. 97 yards and a TD as a sopho-
mo re.
Raymond Romua will start at
comer for Hendncks on defense,
1outi.ng fellow sophomore Freddy
Rodnguez (free safety) and senior
returrting comer John AJderele to
combat a Magnolia passing game
triggered by returning senior quar·
tNback Jacob Davis
Davis, whom 10th-year Sentinels
Coach Bill Friedrich considers
among the top s1gnaJ callers in
North Orange County, ts one of six
rE>tunung starters on offense fo r the
Ordnge Leagu~ representative.
Peter Sekona, a 6-2, 2tS-pound
sPruor, is the only one of eight all-
hMgue picks back from last season.
A second-team choice at defensive
back. be is expected to ildd offen-
SlVe duty dS the startlJlg tailback.
Estdflcid is 16-18 on opening
rught, mduding wins in three of its
ldst four debuts.
STM MCCAANK I DAllY PILOT
Jeremy Valdes gets the starter's call for the Eagles Friday nighL
ESTANCIA LINE .. PS
OFRNSE DEFENSt
No.Pfayw
I JOIEMY VAi.OU
1 A#oY ROMO
6 MAnMUWB
34 5«AN ftUMAH
5 JoHH ALoolEn
39 GUJIN OloGAH
50 CUM ROMOO
55 DAVID ROOllUGUfZ
72 TIM VAl.0£Z.
10 JOSff VUCH
75 KYLI WuTMAN
ttt. Wt.0. Pos.
s-8 160 k OB
6-1 175 Jr TB
S-7 175 Sr. FB
6-2 190 Sr. WB
6-0 175 Sr. WR
6-1 215 Sr. TE
6-3 235 Jr LT
S-10 235 Jr LG
6-0 255 Jr C
6--4 235 Sr RG
6-3 290 Sr RT
No. Playw
75 KYLE WU1MAN
70 JosH VEAOt
55 DAVID RooNGulZ
34 SEAN ftUMAH
50 ClSAA ROMDtO
6 MAnMu£Lwt
36 fAHAO JAHIO
1 ANDY ROMO
5 JOHH ALlKRETE
21 RAYMOND ROMIA
3 ftw>oy RODRIGUEZ
ttt. Wt. a. ros.
6-3 290 Sf DE
6" 235 Sr NG
S·lO 235 Jr LG
6-2 190 Sr. Ol8
6-3 235 Jr ILB
S-7 175 Sr MLB
6-1 220 Jr ILB
6-1 175 Jr OLB
6-0 175 Sr CB
5 B 165 So CB
6-0 180 So SS
MUSTANGS
CONTINUED FROM 81
Duddridge and returning tackle
Grubis1ch up front, whife comers
Ste wart and Jake Cleveland flank
free safety Willy Franco m the sec·
Gonzalez returns and senior return-
ing receiver Jesse Romero was sec-
ond-team all-league as a defensive
back. Rome ro is one or only two
returning starte rs on defense. , .....
&foot-3 with supcnor ledpmg ability) and
both caught high-arcing aenals against Cal-
v~ Chapel. .
-Fe rryman caught 15 pac;ses for 238 yards
last fall (nearly 58% of the tecl111's receptions)
.and Howell predicts he could tnple that out·
put tlus season.
... Senior Eliseo Ma rtinez, dn All-Newport-
~Mesa District guard last Jail, anchors an
offensive line which includes returning
starter Eric Connaty. The group averages 275
•poundli from tackle to tackle,
On dc fen e, coordinator Tum Baldwin,
who at 68 predate W1tte•s arrivaJ m the
Orange County <.·o chmg rankli by everal
asons, will unlet.1lth an aggressive, four-four
ttack which feature all·dtslnct p rfonners
errymrm, Jason Rankin and Wei.I at line·
backer.
-The M a d fcnse-dommated Cal.vary
hapCl, promptmg c"glc coach to cane 1
:ah final 24 schcdulod P~Y'i an order to
n ur then pl ycr woulcf c·..,c.:upc Wtth all
r limbs pointing tho pro r direction,
The Mustang • how••ve.r, have JU t on
r tumtng stnrt r on tho front four (though
end Todd Duddndg tftlt~d la t ason t
ty and' ou id Un bnc.k~) ond non m
lb secondary.
Doniel Hunt r and F mando Aronna jo n
ondary.
Franco (light e nd) joiris Ferry•
man, Weir Grub1s1ch as the team's
only two-way starters This repre-
sents a decrease in Mustangs asked
to pull double duty m recent years.
•Their quarterback ran the option
well and their tailback stood out,•
Howell said after revtewmv. Vldeo or
Saddleback's scnmmage with Centu·
ry ·sut they didn't have numbers on
their Jerse ys, so it was hard to tell who
was who.•
Saddleback finished 4-6·1 last fall,
continuing a trend o( making the
playoffs m alternate seasons since 1994.
·we think we've found players
at most positions," Howell aid. Ellseo MarUneZ
•we just need to make a f~w
adjustment: m how we execute.•
Saddleback, on the other hand, will tick
to the same schemes with which Witte has
become familiar. These arc a stunting four·
four defense and a simple, hut d11Qrse
offense which features an option running
The Roadrunner.; were unbeaten m six
games agamst M a, before tho Mustangs
won the Jast two scac;on opener~.
The Mustangs arc 7-2 m ~ason debuts 1o
the '90 and could even their record Ill 40
openers wtth a victory. game and ju .. t •
enough passmg to r::::=:-:;:----.------------------.-..;......, keep keep · d fen~ec; COSTA MES A LINEUPS
honest.
Vjctor Ortiz, a 5-7,
152-pound n or, will ..a.~ .... Wt.Cl.'Pot.
stoat at qunrterhMk.
He completed 2P of
61 for 377 yard! nnd
four TDs last fall,
bcforo injury broupht
a pr matwe end to
his cAJDpa1gn.
Secnnd·tuam I·
Goldun w t LeolJtle
running bac.k loc1
10 D.-WI• I-Cl llS Sf QI
2 c.J. ~ . S.10 115 Jr "'Tl
12 ,.,,,.,. ..... i.() 260 " fl ............. ,.... 6-il 200 Sr W1'
11 Low DA'f "3 170 Jr. WR
Q WILLY "1Wlco "° 190 Sf tE • a.a ll••WY ._, ~«> ~ LT
A ~ M•.,_ S.10 llO Sf lG
,. lciMT lac -~10 215 Jr c
M l.11111111 MlrallM. :s4 JOO 'r ftG
!M m.c-Y 62 290 Jr RT
OVINSI No.,..,.,
57 DMlll HuNTla .. ""'"MM>~ tz /WffJM't 0. I I CM J TODD .,....,_..
10~-.. s.... ..... ...
12 ... ...... ,, .... """-
20 ... ~.
MM/GO....... .tG WILLY,._.
Mt.Wt.d.Pot.
5-9 195 Jf [)f
S-9 200 Sr. DT
6'0 260 Sf OT
6'0 190 sr DE
'10 115 St OLI
U 200 St Ill
6.0 190 Sr ILi ~ 175 5f Ol.I ,. s-1 1so ~ a u ,.5 St Cl
6.() Ito 5f fl
-011111 COAST LllllPS
No;,..,., ,, ..,,.,..
5 DlvoNa....
4 ltAYIDIO 0.-..
2 DAvlD CAln.IToN
12 Mn. DA&.a
1& GawmfMI
79 A. ~llZ .....
72 A1tntot1Y KNUTSON
51 Joa QtMOla
14 Jae "°"1tsrf
70 AMN4A DuNZ!o •
Ht.wt.a ....
6-6191 So. QB
S-11 235 So TB
S-9 195 So. FB
6-1 200 So Wft
S-9 175 Fr WR
6-2 205 Fr. T£
6-5 315 Fr RT
6-3V4 Fr RG
6-4 3".l8 So. c .
6-0 274 So. LG
6-2 250 So. LT
Garand will look-to take
a majority of the snaps
fbr the Hornets. And,
according to Taylor, he
has the basic tools to be
sug:essful.
-,He's 6-foot-2, 210
pounds' and be has a
good arm for them,• Thy·
tor said.
Taylor believes the
key to the Hornets' sue-Banks
cess on offense it their
offensive line.
The Pirates will have to not
only get through second-team, ·
all-conference guard David
Hong, but will have to try to
match up against 6-3, 320-pound
center Ryan Smith.
"As far as their offense goes,
it's kind of hard to tell from one
scrimmage what their game plan
is," Taylor said. "It's just too early
to O..C'.Na• 74KwrA_...
7S VMCI._.
71 ........
45 MAln'lll JANl'ON
59 Douca McDMEL I DumN l>AIM J ....., Plw.oTTO
40 W0ooYOnl
10 ..., .....
27.b-.~
to tell.•
.. ~ 260 ff. OE •
6-2 2IO So OT ;
M215 ff OT•
6-2 315 ff. DE•
6-3217 Fr. U
6-3 240 So. MLI 11 6-0 205 ff. OL8
s-10 185 so. ca
6-0 190 So. Cl
6-2 215 So. F5
S.10 180 fr, SS
In terms of the Fulle
ton's defense, Taylor ·
impressed with the a~
letic play of some of the
Hornets, especially line·
backer Todd Frazier,
·They're not quite a~
big as Santa Monic4
was," Tuylor said. "But J
think there are muci>
better athletes on Pulle~
ton's squad.•
OCC heads into opening nigh1
without one of its key players.
Linebacker Wallace Wong will
miss the first two games of the
season with a sprained rigllt
knee.
The Pirates and the Hornets
each finished 3-7 last season.
The Hornets lead the series,
2S..18-3, since the two first met in
1948.
NEWPORT HARBOR LINEUPS
OFFENSE
No.~
4 8luAN GAETA
2 A..-SnwNIT
5 Mm TUNilEY
3 JuSTtN JACOes
I Blu.Y Cl..AY?OH
85 NKX~
79 8LAll JoHEs
68 STEVE WUltAwm
58 WlzCauz
10 NICI( HAooY
11 ROllEllT COLE
Ht. Wt. a . ros.
6-3 170So. 08
S-9 HiO Sr T8
S-10 200 Sr F8
6.0 165 Sr WR
6-5 195 Sr WR
6-4 225 Sr TE
6-8 2•5 Sr LT
6-2 200 Sr LG
S-1, 20S Sr C
6-3 223 Sr, RG
S.5 32S Sr · RT
. .
SAILORS
CONTINUED FROM 81
It would appear · unwise to
expect a change in either trend
The Sailors, anxious to
rebound from oRly their second
postseason absence in the '90s~
are ranked filth in CIF Southern
Section Division VI and fresh off
an impressive' display m a scrim-
mage Friday agains t high!~
regar<;led Mission Viejo.
•I .think it's time for us to go
have'·a game/ Brinkley said. MJ
think our kids are focused and
ready to play.•
·;AQrange tallied three touch-
.aowns to Estancia's two in its Fri-
day scrimmage and
appears to be much-.
improve~ from a squad
that surrendered a coun-
ty-worst 475 points in 10
games a year ago.
But the Century
No ..... )'M'
15 NKX~
21 AHoY KA.I.ANZ
78 NKX MoGHAooAM
1 GAMETT TM>HCALI
1 CHllts MAHDalNo
55 Al.AN SADCZ
5 MuTUNNIY
2 ANOlll SnwAllT
3 JumN JACXMaS
8 BIUY Cl..AVTOH
20 DAYNI PfAff
Ht.wt.a. .....
6-4 225 Sr. DE
S-9 190 Sr. -NG
6-3 230 Sr. OT
6-0 185 k . DE
6-2 19S Jr. OL8
6-1 250 Jr. ML8
S-10 200 Sr. OLB.
S-9 160 Sr. CB'
6-0 165 Sf. CB
6-5 19S Jr. SS
6-2 180 Sr. FS
.DIRECTIONS r-
ro EL MODENA HIGH
+ North on 55 to Chapman Av8,
turnoff. Right on Chapman and
proceed easterly. School on left.
Orange scored just 106 points
last sea.son, so offensive improve-
ment won't be hard to pull off.
Newport Harbor will be hard·
pressed to improve upon las~
yea.r's 70-6 trouncing of Orange,
in which the Tars amassed 423
yards of offense to the Panthers'
137. The scoring explosion was
the most points in a single game
in the 68-season history of the
I larbor program. ·
But most or that out·
put, mcluding 'touch·
downs on the first six
Newport possessions,
was accomplished by a
group of now-departed
skill-position starters.
Sophomore Edison League representative
has failed to beat Harbor
in eight straight openers
and bas not made the
playoffs since 1992,
"They're much-Brlnkley
transfer Brian Gaeta
makes his varsity debut
at quarterback, while
seruor Andre Stewart
makes lus first varsity
start at tailback for the improved from last year
and (Capps) has had d full year
with them, so they understand tu.s
system,• said Brinkley, who
observed the Panthers' scrim-
mage in Harbor's stadinm. •Tuey
look like they have some good
skill people.·
Skill-position standouts who
unpressed against Estancia were
junior tailback Jeremy Poole,
junior 6-foot-3, 225-pound full·
back Rashaad ~oyal, and junior
tailback Jon Allmond.
Poole, a returning starter,
exploded for a TD run of around
70 yards on the second play
against Estancia, but played btUe
thereafter.
Royal, a bruising 1.ll.Slde runner,
is also a standout at defensive
end, while Allmond showed
breakaway speed and elusive-
ness 10 the scrimmage.
The Panthers are also keyed
by senior CJ. Joyner, a first-team
all-league receivl\J' last season
after catching 35 pa~ es for 663
yards. Joiner, however, may pbt
time at quarterback W1th nior
returner Ryan Johnson
Sailors. Ste wart has 182 rushing
yards in 69 carries in two seasons
as a backup.
The Sailors do have experi·
e nce at receiver, where seniors
Billy Clayton (24 receptions for
485 yards m '98) and Justin
Jacobs (21 catches for 248 yards)
provide proven targets for Gaeta,
as well as junior Chris Manderi-
no, who figures to see time under
center.
Clayton, Jacobs and Stewart
will also start in the secondary,
joining Mike Tunney (fullbaek-
outside linebacker) and Nick
Langsdorf (tight end-defensive
end) as two-way starters.
Blair Jones, a 6-8, 245-pound
'.'>enior tackle, anthors the Tars'
offensive front. He is a big-ti.me
recrmt, who has already fielded
cholar5hip offers from use,
Michigan, Cal, Oregon and Col·
· orado.
Newport Harbor bas out-
scored Orange, 149-27, the last
three seasons and leads the
series, which began in 1931,
23·9·4.
DllP Sil
pa11y Pilot Sports
~~.~,~,~,~.~l~l~L~-~~.~.~.~.-.-1-.-t~,-.~.~.,~.-,-.-,~~HIITIN Thllfsdcry, ~9. 1999'
. KIM HAGGERTY-ZVUUS I DAILY PILOT
Brett Baker, shown here as the center of attention against Santa Margarita when a prep at
Newport Harbor, is plying bis trade and stock at strong safety at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo.
·Illista in blOom
1"' I
. • Preseason All-American headlines a host of
Newport Harbor alumni playing college football.
8\Jlm F Ul~lll
lki't Pb
Though be was a two-time All-
• 1 Newport-Mesa D1Stnct performer
,·at Newport Harbor High, it's fair
l1to say Brett Hll.sla hds been a late
bloomer when it comes to foot-
ball.
Now a junior strong sdf et'y at
Tusculum College in Greeneville,
Tenn.. the 6-foot-3, 20S-pound
i--.--Q'r~nge Coast .College· transfer
earned first-team preseason All-
American honors in D1vlSlon II.
•To say he was starting tor us,
would be an understatement,·
said a Tusculum spokesperson.
Hlista, who made second-team
AU-Sea View League as d seruor
receiver and was a Junior stand-
out on the Tars' 1992 CIF South-
ern Section DiVlSion IV finahst,
was an AU-South Region sefec-
bon last fall for P10neers He led
the team with 103 tackles, includ-
ing ~ for losses and had two
interceptions He also broke up
six passes, recovered two fumbles
and f orce~other.
Hlista, who began his colle-
giate athlebc career in the South-
ern Cdl.ifomia College baseball
program, led his South AUantic
Conference squad to an t 1-9 sea-
son-opening vicrory Thursday
• over Livingstone. He made nine
tackles, blocked d field-goal
attempt anci had the game-
clindung interception late m the
fourth quarter. ·
Tusculum continues Saturday
against Catawba College. against
which Hlista had d career-best 16
tackles last fall.
While Hlista may hold the
rughest profile among Hdrbor
alumni playing colle91ately, there
are several former prep stars tee-·
tering on the brink of notoriety al
the next level.
Danny Pulido, Harbor's all-
time receptions leader, who was
the Newport-Mesa MVP ds a
seruor in 1996, IS a sophomore
bght end at Oregon. A 6-5, 233-
pounder, the former three-sport
standout and Sea View League
Athlete of the Year played situ-
aitonally as a frestunan, but was
fourth on the depth chart entering
the Ducks' season-opening loss
Thursday to Micl:Ugan State. Puli-
do wears No. 85.
Brett Bak.er, another former
distrtct MVP, is startmg at strong
safety for Cal Poly San Lws Obis-
po, which opens its season Thurs-
day at Northern Arizona.
Baker, a S-11, 19S-pound
sophomore, played mostly on spe-
cial teams a year ago, but dlso
saw time in the secondary and at
running back for the Mustangs.
I le wears No 32.
Pete Hogan, the former New-
port-Mesa Defensive Player of the
Year is a backup defensive end al
Colorado State, which opened
with an impressive triumph over
intrastate rival Colorado Sat:\lfday
in the Mlle High Classic in Den-
ver.
The 6-3, 240-pound redshirt
freshman, who played end and
hnebacker as a prep, saw action
against the Buffaloes. He wears
No. 46.
Brant Hill,.who extended Har-
bor's streak of having at least one
player earn a Division I scholar-
ship to three years, is a freshman
defensive end expected to red-
shirt at Nevada. He is listed at
6-4, 240 and wears No. 92.
Reed Johns, a defensive end
for the 1996 Sailers, is a backup
long-snapper at nationdlly
ranked Arizona, which rallied
from a season-operung hammer-
mg by Penn State to top TCU Sat-
urday. The 6-3, 232-pound sopho-
more wears No. 69.
Former Tars Raymond Ohrel
and Eddie Johnson, AU-CIF at
running back and punter, respec-
tively, are expected to play lead-
ing roles at Orange Coast College
this fall.
Derek Fox, a 1998 graduate
who started at defensive tackle
last fall for the Pirates, will sit out
the season after sustaining a
major knee injury. He is sched-
uled for surgery Oct. 6 and plans
to remain involved with this
year's OCC team, if only from the
sideline. He said be is already
gettmg plenty of ~ail from
recruiters at four-year schools.
Never say 'die'
• Costa Mesa products
• Jehangiri, Sides, hope to
'make most of extending
their football careers at
f.o.ir-year college_s.
81\JUtV F.\l LKNIJl
lbtf Pb
For Costa Mesa High alumni
pursuinq the college football
experier1Le, it's all about opportu-
nity.
Jeremy Jehangui and Corey
Sides have sCIZed theirs, whilr
Jeremy Via let one slip away, at
\east temporarily.
Jehangiri, a 1996 graduate
who played two'scasons at line·
backer for Orange Coast College,
bad nearly given up on a scholar-
f_hiP offer from a four-year school.
,Hut when Northern State Univer-
sity in South Dakota stepped for-
ward late m the summer, he sud·
denly found a collegiate home.
A 6·foot-2, 2-45-pound juruor,
Jehangin is expected to hattlo for
'playing time at dcfcn ive end.
•The DivlSlon IT Wolves arc ranked
No 22 nationally in one pres~a
<>on poll. They opened the se4'-SQn
Saturday at Augustana College.
Sides, cs senior on Costa Mesa's
1993 ClF Southern Section D1vt-
s1on VIIl finalist, began lus colle-
giate career at Sonoma State But
the Northern Califorrua school
disbanded its football program. A
receiver and defensive back in
high school,· Sides, however,
sought opportunity el~ewhere
and plans to fulfill his final two
seasons of eligibility beginning
this fall at Division m La Verne.
He is a S-9, 175-pound junior
rover attempting to work his way
up the depth chart m preparation
for the Leopards' season opener
Saturday agamst Occidental.
Via, an AU-CIF offensive line-
man who played in the Orange
County AU-StaJ Game, then was
All-Mission Conference as a
freshman guard for OCC last fall,
1s academically ineligible thi
season. He JS, however, commit-
ted to taking care of his tudi
and returning to the field for the
Pirates m 2000. Should be do so,
and remain healthy, he will most
assuredly get an opporturuty to
continue on at the four-year level.
most likely at a Division I school.
·1 didn't go to class much last
year, but I definitely learned my
lesson,• Via said.
Desire and dedication have
never been a problem for
Jehangin, who toiled diligently in
the weight room to make himself
attracBve to college coaches.
·1 had a backup plan to go to
San Diego State and maybe walk
on. But I probably would have
been 1ust a student there," said
the former AU-Newport-Mesa
District and All-Pacific Coast
League inside linebacker, who
played outside at OCC.
Jehangiri said he isn't sure
how word of his talents spread to
Northern State, but Wolves
coache asked...bim to visit in late
July and the scholarship offer
ensued.
Raymond Ohrel. who spent his
first thre prep seal>Ons at Mesa,
~lore earning All-ClF honors
and graduating from Newport
Hprbor, is expected to be the fea-
tured tAilbock for OCC th.is fall.
TS .STRIDE
~ewport Beach Country Club seems to be
clicking on all eigh t ... or is it 12? ... cylinders.
Ties are good for
ewport Beach
ountry Club. First,
e club's president,
Jerry Anderson, is
named the 1999 Southern
California PGA Golf Professional
of the Year for the second time in
his distinguished career.
Then, during a tune when
hlgh-end daily fee public goli
courses in Orange County are
looking for pl.ayers to fill the
fairways, the private club lll
Newport Beach celebrates a
sold-out membership base of
7SO. Today, there are 20 potential
members on a waiting list.
Finally, as if the club lSll't
living large enough, Anderson
said Tuesday the 2000 Toshiba
Senior Classic, the Seruor PGA
Tour stop at Newport Beach, has
sold out m tenns of hosp1tality
tents and corporate boxes.
While the aforementioned
tournament (the only PGA event
in Orange County) is operated
by the Hoag Hospital Foundation
and tournament director Jeff
Purser, Newport Beach Country
Club is credited for hosting the
venue in a first-class manner.
ln 1998, the first year Wlth
Hoag as tournament operator,
the Toshiba Senior Classic ralSed
$701,000 for the hospital and
won the Seruor PGA Tour's
Chanty of the Year Award In
'99, the event raised $828,SOO for
charity, bolstering its status as
one of the most philanthropic
stops on the Seruor Tour
The tournament set Senior
Tour records for the largest
first-year donation, the largest
second-year donation and the
largest donation for the first two
yeano combined The Toshiba
Classic started in 199S at Mesa
Verde Country Club and moved
to Newport Beach the followmg
year. International Sports &
Event Marketing managed the
tournament for the first lhrce
years.
The Y2K edtllon of the
Toshiba Classic is scheduled for
a week earlier than in past years
(Feb. 28 through Ma~).
Newport Beach Country Club,
wtucb reconstructed the far
corner of the golf course before
the '99 Toshiba event, is
planrung four more renovation
prOJPcts, including a major
change at the 18th green.
"There has certairlly been a
lot of history on that 18th green
the past two years in the Toshiba
Senior Classic, but the
remodeling will make 1t a more
challenging finisrung hole,• said
~derson, referring to the large
mound that will be bWJ.t m back
of th'e green. ·
Following the "toshiba event
in March 2000, construction is
expected to begin and the 18th
fauway will slope down toward
the throat, while the green is
elevated, giving golfers an uphill
approach and taking the "easy
budie" out of play for the Seruor
Tour guys starting in 2001.
Rebuilt tee boxes are also m
the planning stage for Newport
Beach, which has comrrutted to
improving the golf course every
year as long as it hosts the Senior
TQur stop.
Earlier this year, the club
completed a $300,000 project
encompassing holes three, four
and five in the outermost portion
of the layout. The highlights
included a 42-irich rock retaining
wall in front of the fourth green.
a ·cascading waterfall at the
par-three fourth and d11 updated ·
urigation system, in addition to a
remodeled lake.
In March, the 18th green
served as a stage for Toshlba
champion Gary McCord and
runner-up John Jacobs, who
chlpped in for eagle on the fin.t
playoff hole from 90 feet away.
As the greenside gallery erupted,
Jacobs danced a jig, did his best
UIUtation of Chi Chi Rodriguez's
famous "sabre dance• and then
did a backward somersault.
McCord, however, won a
five-hole playoff.
The Southern California PGA
Will hold !ts annual Section
Championship Sept. 13-lS at the
Old Course at Miss1on Hills
Country Club in Rancho Mirage.
Kelly Md.Dos, now the bead
professional at Big Canyon
Country Club, won the Section
title in 1996. Wumers earn
exemptions into three PGA Tow
events in Southern Califorrua.
BRIEFS
·I 0 L F
, The Southern Ca.Wornia PGA
rec~1ved a $20,000 grant for
Junior goll from the Uruted States
Goll Assooabon, the.first section
to receive a grant from tbe
USGA m 41 years.
Jack Nicklaus, whose goll
course ardutectural company
designed the new Aliso Viejo
Goll Club, will make an
appearance at the club, put on
a. chruc and play an exhibition
round Saturday at the high-end,
daily fee public course . Toshiba
offioals are hoping Nicklaus will
come to Orange County again in
February Hl! has never played in
the Toshlba event. ·
The PGA of America's
Southern Cahlonua Section will
host the 83rd PGA Annual
Meeting Nov. 18-29 at the
Anaheun Hilton m Anaheun.
Anderson is a candidate for PGA
of Atnenca Gou ProfesSional of
the Year. Tom Sargent (Mesa
Verde) won the prestigious honor
m 1997.
The Inaugural Tee Off for
Technology Classic, which will
benefit the Newport Harbor
Educabonal Foundation and
raise funds for much-needed
technology for the high school,
lS planned for Nov. 1 at Santa
Ana Country. Club, tournament
co-chairman l\.btch Barker
confirmed Wednesday.
The goal of the event is to
rd.I.Se $50,000 for the foundation.
Opturu.sm IS runrung high for an
early sellouf. Details~
(949) 723-1212
• RICHARD OUNN's golf column
appears every Thursday.
Racing for the cure
• Eighth annual run in-illd Q.round ~
Fashion Island draws many participants;
Registration for the ra~e continues.
NEWPORT BEACH -The
Eighth Annual Orange County R U N N I N G
Race for the Cure will be held at
Fashion lsland on Sept 26
The SK race is certified by the U S lrack & Field
association and will feature some of the top nmners
from around the· world. But there are other cate-
gories for noncompetitive runners. The purse for the
race lS $5,000.
Last year's defending champion Valene Vaughan
is again registered for the race She won the race in
16.28, and she is also the event's record-holder, with
a 1S:S1 clocking.
Linda Somers of San Luis Obispo. who finished
second to Vaughn by sue seconds laSt year, is also in
the race. The fonner Olympian is hoping to improve
on that result and win the race this year.
One of the top newcomers in the race is Michel-
lie Jones from Enonitas, who is the No. 1 female
triathlete in the world. The Austral.tan native recent-
ly started running SK, and she's trying to ~t her
personal record of 16:59.
Other Orange County runners who are confirmed
entries in the race include Kelly Flathers of Hunt-
ington Beach and Brooke Mabe from Sedl Beach
Danny Reed of Lagqna Niguel is one of the male
runners from California. The six-time D1vis1on II All-
Amencan at UC Riverside and current Olympic trial
qualifier will be considered a strong favorite m the
coed race.
There is also a family one-mile fun run/walk for
noncompetitive pamcipants. All the proceeds will
go to the Susan G. Komcn Breast Cancer Founda-
tion. The entry fee for adults ls $25 until Sept. 18,
when it g ts bwnped to $28. Rcgistrabon at the day
of the event i: S.10.
For childr n (17 and und c) and seruors (60 and
over), re91 tration is StS until Sept. 18, and 18
thereafter. For mor • information or regl! trabon, call
(71•1 957·9165 or v1 it www.OC'C.'UJ' com.
OCC offers video-making class
COSTA MESA -A four-------------r part vtdeo workshop designed f 0 0 T I A L L
for those interested m making
or producing football .videos will be offered by
Orange Coast College's Community Education
Ofhce.
The workshop will meet Tuesda}s. Sept 14, 21,
Oct. 19 and Nov 9 from 6-10 pm. lll Room 173 of
Costa Mesa High School. Registrabon fee is $125.
Presenter Richard Zielinski has been produang
football television show .and highlight vtdeos for
ABC, NBC ESPN, NFL, USC and UCLA, among
others
Attendees will learn hgw to play. shoot and edit
professional quality footutill highlight videos.
Students will also have the opportwtity to dttend
a major college football game and ob erve how the
professionals do it.
Registraoon is underway lll OCC's Community
Education Office.
For mfonnation, call (714) 432-5880 or toll free.at
(888) 622-5376.
HD1V at Shark Club Monday
COSTA MESA -The Shark -=--------..-
Club, on Baker in Costa MeNl, will P 0 0 l
be hosting a fund·r~er for the Vmce Ferragamo
Poundabon Monday, a foundation which ralSes
funds for chantable organizations such as the Spe-
aal Olympia and other needy sports programs.'
Guests will be invited to 1om ex-Rams V\ilce F r·
ragamo and Mike Lansford and other ports pe.rson-
alibe-in a eel bnty pool tournament at S p.m.
Monday Night Football will be presented on
what · con idered Orange CoWtty' first large
(11-f t Wide) HD1V projection system. At h4Utime
two·time U S, trick ot ch mp1on Chef Anton W:Dl
put on 8 d monstraUon.
Admittance ls fr with $irtilkS, food and p001 spe-
cials offered. For more mfonnation, call Deanna
Hanow (71.t) 751-1528.
NEVADA
BOB'S GOLF
New Low Prlclna·on ORLIMAR TRI-METAL IRONS
Located in the Mimi's Plaza
(17thSt.&55Fwy) ~~~:
13931 Carroll Way• Tustin 2 •==:
14 73o-&233 '
,
I 0
84 Thuraqoy, ·September 9, 1 m
• It J.. the single wing o~~heH, and opened
up some new horizons.
M any early day prep
football fans still believe
that the T-fonnation
dldn't surface in the harbor area
until September 1948 when
Coach Al Irwin returned to his
· alma mctter and installed it at
Newport Harbor High.
Even Irwin feJt lhatwas the •
case until a fnend re1&ted soine
past commentary from the l~te
Les Miller relative to his h.eed
coaching scene at Harbor fr6m
1943-45
Irwin wa surpnsed, so
evidently Miller never related
c.UlY pas! PXperiments with thf!·
T-lormallon to Irwin.
Miller hac;ically rolled with
the old short punt, but also had
occasions to expenment Wlth the
~predd fom1ation and the "T".
He had l.JtUe experience
t·oachinq 11 -rnan football, but
chd codch one lowd junior
college b-mc1n team to d
champ1onsh1p before coming
west to assume the coaching JOb
held by the Idle Wendell Pickens.
Pickens hc1d enlisted in the Navy
wlule c1n eye disorder had kept
Mtlle1 oul of the rrulilary.
Tlw T-fom1ution chd make one
-;trokt• of h1slory under Miller i.n
the fdll of '43 when c1 hefty back
named Loml' Lcmgmade, d '42
c hamp10nsh1p team veterdn,
rumbled cmiund left end ana
·-,cored on d shvrt touchdown run
t1qain~t I luntmgton Beach The
Tc1rs won, o·O.
Another T-play was called on
tor thP Tdrs agcunst the Sdllla
And ~dints m 1944 before 6,500
lans dl the old Munmpal Bowl
"dnd it let us down," said stout
hloclung hc1< k Joe Muniz, a
brother of second·team All·CJF
Manuel Muniz from the '42
champ team.
A handoff from quarterback
Donnie Miller was planned for
one of the backs, but something
went haywire and the ball
slipped away.
From one angle, Muniz felt .
the fumble loss and it cost the
Tars the game. An interception
by Muniz had set up a potent'l
touchdown in the "red zone,"
but the luck ran out.
Newport lost the contest, 7-6,
on a controversial conversion
kick by 6-foot-7 center Don
Vaughn. One ref claimed he
missed the upnghts, although
many alarmed and angry fans
disagreed on the Harbor side.
Muniz, a 1943-44 veteran,
said, "We just got into the
T-fonnation sparingly when
Miller arrived. We had about a
dozen T-plays, but most of the
attention by the coach was on
the short-punt.''
· Upon his discharge from the
Navy, Pickens resumed his .
o~eration of the short-punt at
Newport for two grid seasons,
then moved on to Orange Coast
College where he would assist
grid chief Ray Rosso one year
and coach baseball.
Af any rate, Irwin was
definitely geared to the
T-formation at Harbor High and
never opened the door for a
return of the old power
formations.
In fact, he carried on with the
T-formation even when he
advanced to Orange Coast m '56
as head grid cb.ief. His two new
assistants, Jim Stangeland and
Bill Poore, were also harmonized.
There was one shi.ft at
Newport in 1958 when the late
Don Burns moved on lo the head
job at Costa Mesa High. He WdS
YOUTH SPORJS
.-epl~ced b,) UCLA g"radu~te .
George Hunter, who dropped
• Burns' T-f ormation and chose to
install the old single-wing that he
dre'W from Bruin Coach Henry
(Red) Sanders.
Unfortunately, neither Hunter
nor Bums experienced many
victories on the scoreboard from
1956 through 1959 at Harbor.
Hunter served two years at
Harbor, then advanced to new
Marina High in Huntington
Beach and established a sound
reputation for himself.
Alter Irwin's arrival at
Newport, Miller, via Athletic
Director Ralph Reed,' was
granted coaching room on the
sports staff to coach Cee, then
Bee football, in the late '40s.
Regrettably, Miller had a habit
0f creating fancy plays with the
younger players and it
sometimes created chaos on
offense 1\vice in '47, two Bee
players got confused and
collided with their tailback out of
the razz.le-dazzle reverses. Both
scenes found the tailbacks
knocked out and taken from the
games.
The varsity players generally
followed Miller's offensive action
with· little trouble, but it was too
N~~ort Speed third.in tournament
I
NEWPORT BEACH -The' NeW'port Speed,
an under-12 AYSO boys soccer team, placed third
at the Costa Mesa McMillari Invitation Tourna-
ment this past weekend.
Newport Speed won its first two games
agdinst Laguna Hills and Tustin, 5-1, and 7-3.
Newport losl to Westmiru;ter, 2-0, but beat North
lrvUle, 7-2, in the final game to take third place
The roster for Newport Speed in the towna-
• ment was goalie Paul Kawamura, defenders
Blake Fogg, Spencer Moore, Parker Stevens,
C layton Helser and Brandon ~' midfielders
Geoff Gustafson, Brett Auer, Tommy Obon and
Clal'k Hardenbergb. and forwards Ted Slater,
Noah Zamow, Carmen Clminl, Kyle Hint and
Sergto Rodriguez..
OCU Sting winS twice at the
Huntington Beach tournament
HUNTINGTON BEACH -The OCU Sting
under-17 boys soccer team won ' its first two
games in the North Huntington Beach Tourna-
ment this past weekend. Brtan Walton scored the
game's only goal in the Sting's first win Saturday,
a 1-0 Victory over RSP Attack.
In the second Vlctory, JusUn Collins scored late
m the game for a 1 wO \Vil:! over PQ Premier. In the
third game on Sunday, Jordan Cbrtsttan and
Charlie Thompson scored, but the Sting lost to
BUSC, 3-2. The StingJost its last game to Bakers-
field, 2-0,
Tennis tournament Is seeking
players for BBRC setup Sept. 27
NEWPORT BEACH -The Building Industry
Assoctabon of Southern Califom1a, Orange
County Chapter is looking for players in the 18th
Annual Tennis Tournament. The tournament is
scheduled for Sept. 27 at the Balboa Bay Club
Racquet Club and is open to all levels of players.
They will be' divided mto Open, A. B, and C
divisions m a nuxed doubles format..
The cost is $80 for two events and $70 for one.
For more information, call (949) 224-0321.
..:
Newport Mesa Jr. All-Amerfcan
Seahawks open season Saturday
NEWPORT BEACH -The Newport~Mesa
Junior All-American Football teams open their
season Saturday at Boruta Creek Park. All the
teams renamed themselves lhe SeahawkS and
five of the six open at home.
The juruor clinic team opens the season at 11
a.m .. with the pee wee game at 1 p.m ., clinic at 3
p.m., juruor pee wee at 5 p.m. and midget at 7
p.m.
Junior cheerleaders will also petform dunng
the game.
Admission l<J free.
frustrating for the younger
fellows. ·
Ironically, Miller, despite the
early day tries with the
T-formation, chose not to follow it
with 1iWin at the varsity level 111 ·.cs
It disgruntled some because
they claimed the varsity program
wouldn't grow U all the coached
didn't follow the vanity.
One 1948 team Bee player
only recalled Miller using
short-punt and spread formation
plays, no T-formation at all. The
'48 Cee team was coached by
John McGowan, who started
with short-punt, but switched
over the the T-formation in 1949.
Miller remained popular with
the varsity players out of the
mid-40s, but the younger players
from the late '40s were not
always in harmony with the
coach.
In )ater years, Miller once. had
an occasion to extend apologies
to anyone he ever off ended on
the gridiron. He was quick to
admit tO a past temperament
with some, but had hopes of
mellowing out any differences.
Oh, and for all of you who
don't have a clue to what was a
Bee or a Cee ... in those days
everytblng was done on a scaled
chart of "exponents."
You could be a senior and still
be a Bee, if you were small
enough. And, you could be a
varsity player as a sophomore, if
you were big, and 15 years old.
1t was all finally done away
with when coaches got their
wish -moving to a system of
varsity, juruor varsity and
frosh-soph levels.
As for coaches on lower
levels usmg their own systems,
contrary to the varsity program ...
I don't th.ink you'd see that very
often these days.
.... ...,.
2 MmMoc. n GllMrln•all'll
t1 IWlm .... s:. , ........ 's...--21 Ml!MC....
11 lull"'"'* ,, ~K.n
..... kounaM
SS ~ JoMNsoflt
7J IACXWMD
llL
Ht.Wt.a. ...
6-0 Ull) Jr. QB
6-2 220 Sr. Tl
6-2 2lO Sf, Fl
s-9 180 Sr WR
5-9 !SOSO WR
S-11 190 Sr. TE
6-4 255 Sr LT
S-10 195 Sr. LG
6-0 225 Jr C
6'° 200 Sr RG
6-1 350 Sr RT
SEA KINGS
CONTINUED FROM 81 •
backs. Only two defensive line-
men, in fact, pack more beef than
the Marina standout.
·we'll have some NFL comers
if we don't tackle, which stands for
not for long,• Freeman said. "We
may be in pretty deep."
Defense is a concern for CdM,
particularly after surrendenng an
average of 9.5 yards per carry to
Villa Park ballcarriers in 24
attempts.
The Sea Kings,. ranked No. 4 in
CIF Southern Section Division IX,
have two returning starters on
defense (tackle-turned-end Jay
Bottom and end Grant Estabrook).
They will also have to contend
with a Marina blocking corps
which averages 241 pounds tackle
to tackle.
But Freeman in encouraged by
his confidence in his offense. ·
"Our offense is ready,· he said.
Triggering the CdM attack b
junior Santa Margarita transfer
Matt Moore, who makes his first
varsity start at quarterback.
Estabrook, who ehters with 258
rushing yards and four touch-
downs in 57 career attempts, Is the
featured rushing opllon at tail-
back.
Flillback will be handled by
senior Elliott Patterson, a lineman
his first two varsJty seasons who
was summoned from the tight end
pool when projected starter Mike
I f
Doily Piloi
•Al LlllUPS
Daw
No. ,..,. .... ""a. ....
77 JAY lonoM
11 DAW 9'au mlaN
71Sull .....
2t O.... ls.-ooic
ll ~HAGl:9
55 llwlMIM ···'* 5' NICK,__
10 IVM..,._
2 MAnMoOM
21 lftOliM COONt
1 Eflle~
.
6-3 220 St. DE
6-S 320 Ji. OT
~ lSS Sr. OT
6-2 220 5( D£
5-7 160 Jr OLI
6-0 200 Sr. Mt.I
S-11175 Jr. OLI
S-9 160 Jr Cl
6-0 180 Jr. CB
S-11 190 Sr SS
6-0 185 Jr FS
Hayes broke his thwn~ against-
Villa Park.
~ayes, a 6-3, 210-pound junior,,
was expectsd to be a potent
weapon, both as a IUJl!ler and
receiver. He is the leading receiver
among returners (njne catches),
but will miss at least one game.
Moore, expected to pose a rush·
ing threat, as well, will look to an
inexperienced receiving corps
when the Sea Kings test the ·air-
ways.
Jon Schrank, a senior newcom-
er, will attempt to convert tus ~ • .$-
speed in the 40-yard dash into
function on the football field.
Sophomore Steven Ward, who
has earned praise from Freeman
for hls soft bands, starts at the 0th-
.er wideout. .
Seniors Sean Fenton and Jason
Kurtz add veteran presence on the
offensive line at left tackle and
guard, respectively.
Among those carrying the
defensive burden for CdM will be
middle linebacker Brandon John-
son, who as the starting right
guard is also one of five two-way
Sea King starters.
Johnson is 6-0, 200 and is
flanked by outside backers Blake
Hacker (5-7, 160) and Nick Prosser
(5-11, 175).
Moore will be thrust into harm's
way at one comer and junior Evan
Burden (5·9, 160) could be expect-
ed to fling himself at Mletkiewicz's
kneecaps and hope for the best.
Saleties Adam Cooper (5-11
190) and Eric Snell. (6-1, 185) are
the last line of defense.
Pirate football battling the be~t · .
• National powers aplenty for Orange Coast football.
With Orange Coast College
entering its second campaign in
the Northern Division of the Mis-
sion Conference, there is still
some talk about how much of a
difference thereis b etween the
two confel"o@nces.
Comparihg the two divisions is
like comparing the New York
Yankees to the Newport Beach
Little League Yankees, no
offense, youngsters.
It's almost hard to comprehend
1ust how doounant the teams in
the Northern Division are to those
in the central.
Let's look at the rankings .
The central division has
mighty Palomar. After firushing
1998 ranked second nationally,
the Comets are the No. 1 ranked
team in Southern California, all of
California, the USA and perhaps
the entire Milky Way Galaxy for
this season.
After Palomar, there .is, well,
not much.
Not counting Palomar, in bead-
to-head matchups the central
division went an astounding 2-23
against the northerners, losmg by
a total of 968-351, or an average
game score of 39-14.
To show how far Palomar is
ahead of its own conference, the
JC NOTES
Comets outscored their own divi-
sion, 255-57, -0r 51-11 per game.
Yikes. ·
The good news is that the
Pirates are no longer in Palomar's
'division.
The bad news is they're m the
Northern Division, which has
three of the Top 20 teams in the
entire bleepin country.
Cerritos is ranked No. 2, Long
Beach No . .12 and Mt. San Anto-
nio No. 17.
To give you the proper
prospective, with the exception oi
California, obviously, there isn't
four teams from the same state on
this list, let alone the same diVl-
sion of a conference.
And guess what? OCC plays
'em all, including the aforemen-
. tioned Palomar Comets.
Por those crying about another
season of no local teams ih the
NFL and those too lazy to travel
to USC or UCLA for decent colle-
giate football, here's this bit of
information.
OCC plays all four of these
national powerhouses at home
this season. It should be fun.
Congratulations to sophomor~
running back Jimmie Banks and
wide receiver David Castleton on
bemg mentioned as "Players td
Watch,· accordmg to-the J.C4
Gnd Wire, which covers all com-·
munity colleges throughout the
United States.
• For Orange Coast men's soccei
co-coach Lai.rd Hayes, Jet lag will
become a normal job hazard as he'
begms his sixth seaso11 as an ~
side judge.
Garnes at Tampa Bay, "'fen-
nessE¥?, BuUaJo, New England
ami lndtanapol.Is will have Hayes
consuming more airline food in
eight weeks than any one human ·
should digest 10 eight years.
"You rack up a lot of frequent
ruer miles, that's for sure," Hayes
said.
With the recent eastern shift of
certain ~ teams formerly based
in Southern California, the
mileage is pretty obvious.
"There are only five teams
west of the Ml.ssissippi River in
the NFL,• Hayes said. "More
often than not, we go east.•
Hayes' first weekend off isn't
until Week 9 and even that is not
etched in stone.
"If there's an injury or if I have
to fill m for someone that week, I'll
be there working,• Hayes said.
-by Tony Altobelli'
I PUBUC NOTICES
Flctltlou• BualneH
N•me Statement
The loltowlng per110N
are doing bustneu as
I PuBUC NOTICES I I PUlllC NOTICES I I PUBLIC NOTICES I I PU8UC NOTICES
TARA DISTRIBUTION
3001 Recthltl Ave , Building
1 Suite 106, Costa Mesa.
CA 92626 Denise Michele McDowell,
210 Ltlle Lane 1309, New·
port Beactl, CA 92663
This business ts con·
duded by; an tndivldual
Have you ttarted doing
bualneu yel? Yee. 1996
Denise Mlehele McDowell
Thll 11a1emenl was filed
'Miil lh8 County Clm ol Otange Coun1y on 8 27-99
1 Q9MI017ot
Da11y PloC Sept. 2, 9, 16, 23. 1 IKl9 Th828
Actiiloua BualneH
Name Statement
The 1~100 persona
are dolnQ bvslneN a1
DESIGNED 4 SALE,
1100 Cotelle. Newpon
e.ach, CA l>1600
JOl!t• Aon Perez, '297 B
Cepit•n. R;yers1de, CA
92508 Thill l.lutlnea• 11 con
dvaeci by 811 lndlvlCl~I
Have )'Ol.I llarted doinO
buSinel•Y t?Yet,8·1890
Jol1ta Ann Petu
Thtt 1tatoment WI filed
Wtlh the County Clerk or
Orange Covnly on 8·27·99
1""80371•
oony PllOI sep1 2. e, '"· 23 111119 lh829
nciltfou• 8uelneu
Name Slat*'Mnt 'The folloWlnO pettona
IN d61ng M a Janice~ Crt111lon1,
I G5 t .J P'140tntl8, CO.ti
CA 12627
J ~.17'8
OoNn OMI • NeM>Ot' ach, CA t Tllll U II COt\•
l)y ~ lndMdull'
Have you Staned doing businoas yet? Yet, 6·26-99
Janice S11ven1on
This sta1ement was filed w'tlh the County Cler11 of
Orange County on 8·27·99
• 19096803692 Dally Piiot Sepl 2, 9, 16.
23, 1999 Th830
Flctitloua Bualnesa
N•m• St•tem•f'lt
The following persons
are doing business as awardpro, 2602 Vista
Dnve, Newport Beacti, CA 926&3
Penny FJem1n2, 2602
Vista Drive, ewport
Beach, CA 92663
Thia t>usmeu Is con-ducted by an ll'ICIMdual Have you started doing
bUMleU yet? Yes, t983
P.,vry Fleming
'htl ltal•menl ~ .. l'lled
wilh Ul8 COunty Clerk of Otange County on 8·27-99
19996803691
• Dally P1lo1 Bepl, 2. 9, HJ,
23 1Q99 ' Th831 ~lctitloua BualneH
Neme 6tahtment
The lollbwlng per.on1 •r• doinQ businou as·
SEACOAP, 3199 ~Air·
pol1 Loop Or., Coata M 5e,
CA9282G AQied tl'ldvttrlea Sate•
and M11nulac1unno Inc.,
(CA), 31 D9 A2. Airport LooP Dt , Cotta M•••· CA
12628 Thit 1>o11neu It con
dUCf9d by 8 ClOIJIOOllloo
HAve you ltlrttd doing
C>Uaineuytt?No
Aiied lnduitt!M SMI .,., MlnutldU!fno, Inc ,
Ma1'i W a.towery, Prnl
c:.lef'il ll1it tta""*1I Mt lll9d
Wfth N County ~ d
Ofano8 ~r.'.t:l:t.
Daly Pb Sepe 2, II HI
23, um Th832
Fictitious BualneH
Name Statement
The tollowlng persons
ara doing bu1ine11 as
a) Ktnesiotoglc Physical Therapy, Inc.,
bl K1neslok>glc.
c) Klnesi04ogtc PT, Inc ..
4971 Pera;mmon Lane,
lrvlne, CA 92612
Kineslotoglc Ptiyalcal
Therapy, Inc., (CA), 4971
PerSlmmon une, Irvine,
CA 92612
This t>usll'M$S II COO·
UUCled by. a oor~tion Have you started dOlng
busifleSS yet? No Klnes1olog1c Phy1lc11
Therlf)Y. Inc , Oebol"ah M
Mollna, Pr111dent
Thil statement w .. flied
with the County Clerk of
Otanga Coun~ 8·27-99 1~'93
Da4y Pilot Sept 2, 9, 18,
23. 1999 Tn83J
f:tetltlou• Bu1lneH
Nam• Statement T,,. IOllOWlng persons
.,. ~ buSlneU ••
A D•"• S Con1uft1ng 19751 Deep Harbor Or1ve.
Huntington Deach, CA
92e<l8 Anlj(llO S.galla, 18761
Deep Hart>OI' 01rve, Hunt·
l~on Beech, CA 91!648 ret s.oana, 1trs1
Deep tart>ot DrMI, Hunt•
1nOton Buell, CA ~8 Thlt tJUllMN i. COl'I•
ductltd t>y or>~ Haw, you •tafMO doing buMlMI~? No ~--filed
"""' ,,. Ccluncy Oftt\ (If Otange CountY On 1qr,99
'I lllllOl111 Dtillv PMot Sept 2 t , I 8 23. , ... Till:M
itlc•oue lt.lwa ...,.......,..,,
Ttw followlnO pertoN
are doing business 11
CROWNING GLORY
HAIRSTYLING, 1125
Victoria S11ee1, Suite 0 ,
Costa Mesa, CA 92628
Lisa Schultz. 22092 la·
landtr Lane, Huntington Beach, CA 92646
This business Is con·
ducted by an lndlVlduat Have you 11arted doing
bullne11 yet? No LIU Scl'lullz
Thlt 1tatemen1 was filed
wllh lhe County Clerk ol
Orang@ County on 8 27 ·09 1999t803713 D1~y Pllol Sept 2. 9, 18.
23, 19'119 Th83S
FictJtloua Bu•lneu
N•me St•tement
The IOllOw'lng pellon6 are dOlng 1>u11nen u ·
F1veH011 , Sp01t1wear,
607 112 N1rd1tu1, Corooa
Del Mar, CA e2e2s FlveHole LLC, (CA), 607 11'2 ~rctuua. Coiona o.t
Mar, CA 92625 This bu nosa I• con·
dUcted by; L'lrnlted Llllbillly O>
Have you llar1ed dOlng
bullneH yet? No
FtveHole LLC, Dave
Welc:tl, Pr s Thie 1111emen1 w flled
with 1ri. County Clerk o1
Orange Coun~8 27•9G
1 '°*' Dilly Piiot $4if>I 2, t 18,
23 IO!lll Th838
ActtilOUi '"'""' Heme ..... ,.,,.
Ttte lotoM1o P8f'IOf1I
are doltlO ~ -Ptamfum P11cemen1
Spe01elttt1 23181 Mm
O,..it Dftv9. ~ 320 L.aouna .._ CA 12953 HetwOtt! Meola Melbt· ~ lnc~_;fCA), t3181 Miii
Cilek ~ Ste. 320
Lagl#'ll Hllll, CA 285)
Thlt ~ la coo
ducted by a corporation
Have you started doing
business yet? Yes,
Jan 1, 1999
Network Media Martcet·
1ng, Inc., Aon W Johnson,
Preak1eot
This statement was flied
with the County Clerk of
Orange County on 8·27·99 1"96803680 Dally Ptlot Sept 2, 9, 16,
23, 11199 Th837
Fltjltloua BualneH
N•me Statement
The toltowing oeraont
are doing business as
OT HOllSTIC LLC, 2789 Bloeb1fd Cr . Costa Mela, CA 92626 4834
OT Holl&tle LLC. (CA),
2789 Bluebird Cr , Coate Mela, CA 92B2&-4834
Thia buSlness It ex>n• d~ed by, L\ml1ed
U8bit1ty Co
Have you atarted dolna
bUSlneH yet? YH, 2-1•91f
OT Holistic U.C, David L
TeYIOr. Manager 1'h11 llatemeot wee tlted
with th• County Ctertc ol Otange County on 8-27·99 19"M03100
Oe1Jy Pllol Sec>t 2, 9, HS,
23. 1099 Th838
Flctldout Bualneaa Ntme Statement
The IOllowlng peraona
are dc>ing bUftnttl as·
Eolt0n Panner1. umlted
Pa11ntrJ11ip, 1501 W•ldtfl ~ SUlte 2e0, Ntwp<>rt CA92lllO f>Ki{tc Qrend Conttrue-
tion, }~·1_ G.nef111 PartMr ~~~,= iMdt "CA t21eO ~ ~ Soec:trum Patt
Mfl Llmltiid .,.,,nettNI>.
(Qdlomle), U01 Wlldtf
Of • a.,,... 290, ~ 8"cti. CA 92660 nus bllllt'llm 11 oon-
ducted by: • ~mlled ,
partnership Hava you star18d doing
buslne11 't•l? No
Pacific Grand construc-
tion, Inc , Ronald E.
Legrand, Pretldent
Thi• atatement was filed
wltti tile Counly Cieri< ol
Orange County on 6·27·99 1"9880*9 Oa~y Pilot Sept. 2, II, 18,
23, 1999 Th839
Flct1tlou1 Bualne ..
N•me Statement
The IOllo~ing peraoos
are doing bus•neM 11 Senlly1'00flng Co. 33CM
N ..... d41 Ave , CO.ta Mein,
Ca 92626 Larry M SWO<d, 3364
Nevada Ave • Coate Mese
Cal\l, 92628
TNt bualnesa 11 con· Ouetod b~, an lndllfldulll Have you 1tarted doino
bu-slnen yt__!7 v ... 2·29-98 Larry M Sword Thia statemont was filed
Wl1h lh• County Cleftl ol Orange COuntv on e~J1 ·ti
1MMIOHeO 011ty Pilot Sept 2, 9, 18,
23, 1099 Th~O
Ffctltloue Bu1lne ..
Nam• St•tement Th4I tollOwlng peraona
11• c:IOirlO bu1lne11 as
True Measure. 120 20Ch
6trM1 ~. Cotta Mesa, CA
112e27
M8lthew Ann1ew Thet
lord t20 20th Str .. 1 #2, Coale MoMa CA 2627
Thia butlOlll II Q)tl•
dUd9d by an Jnclfvldual
HllV8 you ·~ dOlng t>Utlneal yet? Yea, M 911 ......,,. Tn.ttofd
ft* "'""*" WU filed will "" County Clef\ Cll °'1lf9t COUf1tY ·on 8.:J1'" . ,MlllOM1,
Dally Pb Sept 2. 9 16, :23 i 099 TP\&tl 1
Actltloua Bualness
Name Statement
The following persons
ere d<>ln~ bustnefi es
Exacuhve Alliance, 1939
Wallaoe Avenue, Unit 213, Costa Mesa, Calllomla
92627
Cerol Ann Howard 1939
Wallace Avenue, Unit 213,
Costa Mesa. Cahlomle
112627 This bullneSI Is 000·
ducted by an IOOM<lual
HAW you ltarted dOIOQ
t>uslneu ye1? NO
CerQI Howard
This statement waa hied
with the County Clerk oC
011nge County on 8·31·99 19ttel04039 Oa"Y PllOI Sept. 2. II, HI,
23. 11199 Th844'
Flctttloua Bualnua
Name Statement
The IOllOwtng pel'IOt\I are doing botlne u
Burger Ov111ty Vo•
tio111ery. lncorporattd,
1012 Bttoeo lt02, Colt.a
Mesa CA 92627 Burger Oual11y Up·
holatery tncoroorated,
(CA), 1012 Bnoeo 1102, Co61a ,.,..., CA 92627
Thi• bu1tnen 11 con·
doo.d t>y e oorpcwallon Have you 1taned dOfnQ l>Ullneas y t? Yea, 411181
Burger Ouallty Up•
hol6llry lneorpot•ted, Kenneth M Burgert
P1u!Gtnt
l hit llAtement n• llled wt1tl "'8 County ci.r11 ol Orlt!Ot~
Oa'Y PIQC 8-2 • .9, 18, 23, 1"9 Th842
Cll ..
et ......
MNl71
STATEMENT OF
ABANDONMENT OF
USE OF FICTITIOUS
BUSINESS NAME
The lotlow1ng peraon(e)
has (have) abandoned the use of the tictttlou1 bual·
neu name: Viking Petfonnanoa. 485 E 17th Street, Unit 500, Co$ta Mese1 CA 92627
The FlctitlOU& Buslneu
name telerred to et>oYe WU hied In Orange Coonty
on March 5, 1999, FILE
NO 1999-6785225
Enk Follcedal. Maneoino
Partner, 485 E 17th SliMf.
Colla Mae. CA 112627
Viking Aircraft ProdUC!I,
lnvestC>f, 1785 E Sehera. Suite 490, Laa Vegu, NV
89104
Thia bulln8$t II con•
duc;lad by • limited pert• . nefltliP
Viking Aircraft Produc:U,
Anders F<>lkedll. Pruldenl
Thll •talement WU flleCI
With the COonty Cler11 oC
Orange eouoi. on 9'3199 1 tlll0440J
01111¥ PilcJ( Sept tt 18, 23. 36, 1999 h856
syslaml He and '* w\11 Barbera and tour friends di·
velOped a IT\lllOlltttl lhoW
c&'ld "Cyclone Malone" wtllCh
ran nl~lly on NBC TV The Cemet'""" • Mortuary ahOW WU nomln&lfld fot Ill -·I Etnmy Award at tile 2nct enooal Chapel • CrematP,'Y
awards dinner In 1950. Htbl 3500 Paclfl .flew Orivtl
holds 1wO U S patenlS, II the Newport Beach
a~ of two bO<*I on com-844·2700
putera Jlllls • booll on Iha hie· 11111------· 1or; of DdlOa ~ end one ptQC( IMntdl
on the 11rty daya ot radio end •R• 1 -·-•v T v Ha held en M 8.A tum ~ --•"•
Peppt1clnl UnlV.ralty Ha " Mortuary * Chapel f llllVl'llCI llY his Wife Batt>eira of Cremation Balboe lsfencf. two daughters
and thefa hutbatldt, •Iv• 11 O Broadway
granctdlllclren. .m one 111911 Costa Mesa
gtlnclchld DonillON ~ bt .... 2 e.1 aft made to Ntfrl>Ort Ctnttr -• ., vv
United Mtlhod~t Chur'h (NC U M C) Galdln fund at
1801 MllOUtf'll Ave Cotoot
c111 MM, CA 9262$
"Affordable
Alternative"
Discount Caske:t,
Cremation&
Burial Service
Why should you subject
your elf & your family to
paying inflated prices for
ca kcts & ervices????
Call loll Free 1-888·54CASKET
Saving Orangt &l Surrounding Couomcs
Doily Pilot
I STATlllENT OF ~MANDONMl!NT OF
UH OF FICTITIOUS
8U81NESI NAME
he f0Uow1r1g person(&)
1 (have) abandoned the
~Ml ol the. flotllloo11 busl· Jl!ll nama·
1 Prwmlum Ptacemant Spe· t.:leliMI, 23792 Roel<lleld ·CMvd , Ste. 230, Lake For· ~1:CA 92630 • Tha Flctltlous 6uSlness
flame ralerred to ebOve ts Hied tn Orange County
Sep. 25, 1996, FILE
0 . 19963697090
t Ron W JOhnson, 23792
f'oddteld Bfll<I., Ste. 230,
lake Forest. CA 92630
This business Is con·
ducted by: an lndiVIOual
Ron w Howard
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Orange County on 8127 /99
I 1~03701
Dally Piiot Sept 2, 9, 16.
23, 1999 . Th8'13
Flctltloua Buslnesa
Name Statement
The loUowing persons
are doing blJsmess as:
METRO FINANCIAL, 5
Corporate Plaza, Newport
Beac;h, CA 92660
Darreu Pash, 1207 Gold·
enrod. Corona del Mar, CA
92625
This business ls con·
ducted by: an Jnd1111Qua1
Have you started doing
business yet? No
• Darrell Pash
L This statement was flied
wtlh the County Clerk ol
G>range County on 8·27·99
19996803671
Dally Piiot Sept 9, 16,
23. 30, 1999 Th845
ALAN G. LANCE
AITORNEY GENERAL
STATE OF IDAHO
MARY E. HUGHES
Oeputy Attorney
General
State ot Idaho
Department of
F.inance P.O. Box 83720
Boise , Idaho
83720-0031
Telephone·
lrutt, 7/11911, 44S5 TOf·
n1nce 81.. •SMl3, torrence,
CA90503
Thi& bUSlnesa 1s con
ducted by a buslnen 1rust
Have you started dolno
bu.aineu yet7 Yes Jury f.
1Q99
J A. MattataU, Trustee Tiii• statement was flied
with the County Clerk ot
Orange Coonl~ 1 2
Dally Piiot Sept 9, 16,
23,30, 1999 T~7
Flctltloua Buelneu
Name Statement
The lolloWiflg persons
are doing bUsl11eu as·
ARTESCAPE CY6ER
GALLERY, 33591 Via De
Agua , San Juan
Ceplstrano, Ca 92675
Artescape CVber GaTiery,
(Ce), 33591 \Ila De Agua,
San Juan. Ca 92675
Joseph W Kemp, 33591
Vta De Agua. San Juan
Capistrano, Ca 92675
This buslnen Is 900· ducted by· ~ general
partnership
Have you started doing
buslnes.s yet? Ves
Sept 1. 1999
Artescape Cyber Gallery,
G;imeron Pearce (Presl·
dentl Th s statement was filed
with the County Clerk ol
Orange County on 9·3·99
19996804432
Dally Pilot SepL 9, 16,
23, 30, 1999 Th848
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing bUslness as:
-Cast Craft, 17972 Sky·
park Circle, Suite D, Irvine,
CA 92714
Ala11 8. Lemrl\erman.
247 DriftWOOd Road, Co·
rona dal Mar, CA 92625
Samara J Lemmerman.
247 Driftwood Road, Co-rona del Mar, CA 92625
This business is con-
ducted by husband and
wit&
Have you started domg
business yet? No
Alan B Lemmerman
This stateme111 wa~ hied
with the County Clerk ol
Orange Cou11ty on 9·3·99
19996804427 t (208) 332·8092
Facsimile:
(208) 332-8098
• Dally Pilot Sepe. 9, 16,
23,30, 1999 Th849
IN THE . DIS TRICT
COURT' OF THE FIFTH
JUDICIAL DISTRICT
OF THE STATE OF
IDAHO, IN AND FOR
THE COUNTY OF
TWIN FALLS
STATE OF IDAHO,
Department of Finance. Plalntitt, vs.
GECKO HOLDINGS,
INC., JOHN BOWMAN,
and PENNY PARKER,
Defendants.
Civil No. CV ·99·590
ANOTHER SUMMONS
BY PUBLICATION
NOTICE: YOU HAVE
SEEN SUED BY THE
ABOVE-NAMED
~LAINTIFF.
T HE COURT MAY
ENTER JUDGEMENT
AG~INST YOU Wtnf·
OUT FURTHER NO·
TICE UNLESS YOU RESPON~ WITHIN 20
DAYS. ~E~D THE IN·
FORMATION BELOW.
10: GECKO HOLD-
INGS; INC.
JOHN BOWMAN
PENNY PARKER
You are nereby notified
that In orcler to defend this
lawsuit, an. appropnate ro·
SPQnse ~ust be filed with
fhe above designated court
within 20 days alter servlctl
ot this Summons on you, It yoo fall to respond. Iha
¢0Urt may enter judgement
against you as demanded
by the plaintiff In lhe Ven·
fled Complaint.
ll you wish to seek the
adl/lse or representauon by
en attorney 1n this matter,
yw s~ld do so promptly
so that your written re-
SPQnse, If any, may be fifed
1n ume and other legal ~his protected
The nature of the claim
against you Is alleged vio·
tatlons of the Idaho Secur·
llt8$ Act.
An appropriate wnuen re·
tq>onse requires com·
l)llance with Rule 10(a)(1l
and ·other Idaho Rules o
C111H Procedure and shall
also lnciude 1 The title and number of
this case
2 If your response is an
Answer to the Vanhed
Complaint. 11 must contain
admlsslo11s or dentals of
Ille separate allegat10ns of
tfle Vel\hed Complaint and
!'er defe11ses you may
Claim 3. Your signature, mall· tng addreu and telcphofle
number, or the signature,
1M1llng address and tale·
phone number of yoor at·
iorney
• 4. Proof of mailing or de·
t1Very of a copy Of yoor re·
sponse to pla1n11trs at·
f
to rney, as designated
81X1ve
To determine whelher
ou must pay a l1itng lee
~' respon&e, con·
!act lhe Clerk of lhct •bOYe· named court
·DATED this 28 day of
April 1999
CLERK Ot: THE
DISTRICT COURT av: /SI a. oaw
Deputy Clerk
Publllhed NewpOll Oeaeh·
ta M9M Dally Pilot
ptel'T'lber 9, 16, 23. 30, 1~9 Th864
Flctltloua Bualne ..
Namt Sta-.ment
The following peBMS
re dOlnO business as.
ACER, 135 Commercial
oy, Costa Men, Ce
2Cl27
Amb\ll'QOY C.rietl Con·
• tn1c::1lon Inc , (~). '35
mardet wav. Co1111 ea \lltn
Thi• b\11hien Is con·
uctld by a oorporat1on
Have you 11a11.ci dOlng
Ulint .. yet? No Anlbotgey Cef'k.h Cao•
uuc11on, tnc , Ron
nbutg41y V1C41 Prea
Thll •t11emon1 wa fit.u 1tt1 1i-eoonty 0.111 01
1\00 c~
o~ fe': s.p1 ~ ,,. .,...
,..,,,. ... tement
'Thi fl')lloW!ng P9t'IOOI rt dOfna lbUtlOHI II A Tl illf't'fcN 2 Tlltan. ._ .... CA9a66
11am.. A Ma1111all ,..... iot PadllrbOrn
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The fol10w1ng persons
are oolng business as.
802 E. Pine Slreet Apart·
ments, 802 E. Pine Street.
Santa Ana. CA 92701
Victor Gruber. 2828 Eu·
ropa Drive, Costa Mesa,
CA92626
Dan Gruber, 15821
Ventura Bootevard, Suite
600, Woodlal1d Hills, CA
91436
Jon Gruber, 253 Hanover
Drive, Costa Mesa, CA
92626
This business Is con·
ducted by. Other-Specify
Tena11ts·tn·Common
Have you started doing
business yet? No
Vietor Gruber
This statement was med
With the County Clerk ot
Orange County bn 9·3-99
19996804431
Datly Pilot Sept 9, 16,
23. 30. 1999 Th850
Fictitious Butlneu
Name Statement
Tne following persons
are doing business as:
EZnet, 2.727 West Coast
Highway, Newport Beach
CA 92663
EZnel, Inc.. (NV). 2727
Wesl Coast Highway
Newport Beach. CA"'92663
This business 1s con-
duCled by; a oorpora11on
Have you started dOing
buslnes& yet'? Yes, 8115199
EZnet,.lnc .. Albert Blake
Chnstensen, CEO
This statement was tiled
with the C<funty Clerx of
Orange County on 9·3·99
19996804406
Daily Pllut Sept. 9, 16.
23, 30, 1999 , Th851
Flctltloue Bu1lneas
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as·
P A. B. ProducliOM,
1345 North Cabllllo Park
Dnve. Unit K·1, 5anta Ana,
CA 92701
Rlehard Griffin Tamura.
1345 North Cabrlllo Park
Dnve, Unit K·1 Santa Ana,
CA 927CM
This bu&1ness Is con·
ducteo by. co-partners
Have you started dOtng
business yet? Yes, 7115199
A Gl'lllln Tamura
Thli. st.atemenl was filed
with Iha County Clerk of
Ora11ge County on 9·3·99
19996804425
Datly P110t Sept. 9.L.. 1...1!· 23, 30, 1999 lntJ:)2
Flct1tlou1 Bualness
Name Statement
The lollowlng persons
are doing business as
Victory Productions,
2 WIJ10ed Foot Lane, New·
part Beach, CA 92660
David J Jonker, 2
Winged Foot lane. New·
port Beacll, CA 92660
This buslneas Is con·
dueled by an 1nalvldual
Have you &tarted doing
busin6" yal? Yea. OOJ09199
David J. Junker
This statement was flled
with me County Cieri! of
Oral'\ge County oo 9·3·99
1"96804418
011Uy P110I Sept 9, 16,
23. 30, 1999 Th853
Flctltloua BuelneH
Name Statement
The following pel'IOl'15
are 00.ng bUslness as.
Newport Plant• an\J
F'IO\.eta 1652 NeWP.Ort 131~. Cosla MeH, Callfor·
nla 92627
Sallie Vanan1an, 1249
Soolh Dlam(:\(ld Bai Blvd •
01ainond 881, Colllomla
91765 John Ramsey, 1375 San
Oemadlno Road. San
D11Mt, Cahlomla
Th11 buSlnHI " cotl• dueled by· • weneral pl\rtnflrth p
Have YoU st»rttd CIOing
OUtlMSS yet'? Ve1, 6·1·9~
S.rtie Vartanian
n11s lt81ttrMnl WM filed
with lhe COulllV CIOrll of
Oflnglt Count':.=:9 t 10
OeJly Piiot S.pt !9, Ui,
23. 9!0, 1990 Th8M FtCthlOu1 Bual.,...
Mente 81•~· Tiie loltOwlng l)etlOnl
8111 oomg llcnlnill ••
Clptalfl BombW• ""25
30UI s1,..t ... !!1.1. Newp<Jn 8Mdt'CAv-~ cOf/co .. L l!'fC • (C~I
•25-lOln ~' fl3, Nft' ~ BltlCO, CA l2f!83 1rl'lll bu11MN 11 cori
I~ 11 P\mUQ..,.. I
cJuc:ted by a GOrpe)fallon
Have you started dQing
tiuatneu yet? vu.
04-01 88
COFCO, INC. Sandi
Cotter, Vlc.i Prdldenl/Seo· retary
Thfs s1a1emet11 was l1led
with Iha County Cler1': of
Orange County on 9.3.99
199MI04388
Dally Pilot Sept 9, 16.
23. 30. 11>99 Th655
Flctltloue Bueln•H
Name Statement
Tl1e loltowlng • parsons
are doing business u .
Systems from Scratch,
19282 Evening Hill Dr.,
Huntington Beach, Cahlof·
nla 92648
Mark Toa;tado, 19282
Evening HUI Dr.. Hunt·
tngton Beach, Calllomla
92648
Robert Friedman, 19282
Evening Hiii Dr.. Hunt-
ington Beach. Calltomla
92648 .
• This • bUstness 1s con·
ducted by· co-partners
Have you staned doing
business yet? No
Mark TO&tado
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk ol
Orange Counly on 9·3·99
19996804399
Daily Pilot &pt 9. 1e.
23,30, \999 Th856
Fictitious Bualness
Name Statement
The tollowmg persons
are doing business as:
DESIGN 21, 170 New-
pon Center Or.. #150:
Newport Bcti, CA 92660
Wendy Valdes, 2527
Bamboo St., Newport
Beach. CA 92660
This business Is con·
ducted by· an lndlllldual
Have you started doing
business yet? No
We11dy Valdes
This statement was hied
Wtlh the County Clerk of
Ora11ge County on 9·3·99
19996804428
Daily Pilot Sept 9, 18,
23,30, 1999 Th857
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as·
New Millennium Mott·
gage & Escrow Services,
2686 Elden Ave • Costa
Mesa, CA 92627
Margaret A Lea. Real
Eslate Broker Lic
#005<IB373. 2686 Eloen
Ave., Costa Mesa. CA
92627
Tnls business Is con·
dllcted by: an 1ndlvtdual
Have you staned dolng
business yet? No
Margaret A. Lea
ThlS statement was ftled
with the County Clerll of
Orange County on 9.3.99
19996804424
Dally Pilot &pt 9, 16.
23.30, 1999 Th859
Flctrtlous B1Jslnns
Name Statement
The totlOwlng ·parsons
are doing business aS;
Coast to Coasl Supply
Center, 10854 Pebble Ct .•
fountain Valley, CA 92708
Jason Marquette. 10854
Pebble Ct., Fountain Val·
ley. CA 92708
This business 1s con·
ducted by· an lndlllfdual
Have you started doing
business yet? No Jason Marquette
This statemerit was hied
with the County Cieri< of
Orange County Oil 9·3-99
19996804430
Daily Pilot Sept. 9, 16,
23,30, 1999 Th860
NOTICE OF
DISSOLUTION OF
PARTNERSHIP
(1) PEREIRA MANBECI<
ASSOCIATED
DESIGNERS, a partner·
ship consisting of LOUIS A
PEREIRA and CHERYL
MANBECK. 811d wfileh has
carried on Its business al
4101 Westerly Place. SUlte
107, Newp()rt Beach, Call·
fornla 92660, was dis·
solved eltectlve 11.59
pm •. on JUNE 17, 1999
(2) After the aoove date,
no partner In the partner·
ship has author1ty to bind
the partnership All debts
owed by the partnergh1p
wm be patd and all oblige·
tloos due from anyone ca11 be received or paid at Ille
address set forth abOYe.
DATED M.ty 3. 1999
IS/ LOUIS A. PEREIRA
Published Newpon Beach·
Costa Mesa Dally Piiot
September 9. 1999
Th861
Fict itious BualneH ,..
Name State~enl
The following perso11s
are doing business as·
~ Design. 1000 w.
Coast Hwy., Newport
Beach Caflfornla 92663
S.T BodY Design Inc,
(CA). 1000 W Coast Hwy.,
Ne'WJ)Ort Beach, Catlfom1a
92663
This business Is. con-
ducted by· a corporation
Have ..you slatted doing
bU&1ness yet? Yes, 7116186
S.T Body Design, Inc.,
Susan f0b1essan, Presl·
dent This statement was !tied
wilh the County Clork ol
Orange County on 9.7.99 11K19680t521
Dally PilOI Sept. 9, 16,
23. 30, 1999 Th863
NOTICE Of PETITION
TO ADMINISTER
ESTATE OF:
WOLF H. STERN
CASE NUMBER: A198741
To all heir$, tienell·
clanes: c1ed1tor1, cont
1ngen1 aedttOl'11 and per
tons wtlO may o11'1tMIH
bo inl811lsted In tha will or
estate, or b<>lh, of
WOLF H. STERN
A PGTITION FOR PAO·
BA r nu ucon hlod l>v Alban Ann Stl(llm
tn the Sup nor Court of
C.11tom1a, CA:iunty ol
Ofanl)llO
rHE PETITION FOR
PROBATE! ,.quttll lhsl
Alt11n Ann Srtm
be appointed ae petaooal
1IPf8'8nl1l1ve to a11m1ols•
tor Iha aslRt11 ot tl\tl d.CO-
dent.
THe PETITION rtqUOllt
lhe ~lldOlll • !Mii :and
DOdldll, If .any, be 11drnlltwd
10 probate lhe will and
any COC1iCfls 1!118 DVllllbfe
lor eum•oafion In the tllt
ktOt ~ tn4l C!OV,,
'THE PEllTION l'IQUMlt
sutflorlty '° adnunls1er the ...... Undfr h lnd4!tltfl0·
M1t ~ .. ,ion 1ol 'Et•
lalH NL (llllt ~ ... allalir b pelM)n8I ,..,.
reMnteM '6 .. rnenv llCllclns wttritM ~
coot'! a roval 8elofi
Wltng certain very Imp()(·
1401 actiOOt, howewf. Iha
personal repreHntallve
will be 19<1u1rec1 to give no-
tice to Interested peraona
unlesa they have waived noUce « consented 10 1he
proposed actlOO) The In·
dependent a0mlnistrauon
authOOty Will be gr&111ed
unten an ln'8re1ted per-
son In•• an obJectlOll to 1"e
petttlOn and shows good
cause why the court should
not grant lne authonly
A HEARING on 'the peh-
llon win be held 011
10/7/99 at 1·45 p.m
Dept. L73.
341 The City Drtve South,
Orange, CA 92668
Lamoreaux JUslice Center
IF YOU OBJECT to the
graotlng ot the pelitlOn, you shook! appear at the hear-
ing and state your ob,ec· tlons or Ille wntten Ob ec-
tlons with the court be ore the hearing. Your 'ap·
pearance may be in person
Qr by your atfome~.
·IF YOU ARE A CREDI·
TOR or contingent credltor
ol the deceased, you must
Ille your . ctalm With tba.
court and mall a copy to the
persona\ represen1atlve
appointed by the court
wittim tour months from the
'date of first •ssuani::e of let·
ters as provided in Probate
Code sect1o11 9100. The
tlme for filing Claims will not
expire before tour months
from U:le .hearing date no·
llood above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE the
hie kept by the coun If you
re a person Interested In
ha estate. you may ltle
with the court a Request tor
Special Notice (form
DE-154) 01 the.1111ng ol an
inventory and appraisal of
estate assets or of any
pelftlon or account as
provided In Probate Code
seelloo 1250. A Request
for Special Notice lorm Is
available from Iha court clerk.
Attorney for Pefltloner:
W. Rod Stem,
(Bar # 110003)
Grqh, Carron, Stern
& Werner,
2600 Michelson Drive,
Suite 270,
trvll'le, California 82612
ATTORNEY FOR:
Albin Ann Stern
Published Newport Beach·
Costa Mesa Dally Pilot
September 9, 10, 16. 1999
ThF862
Fictitious Business
Name Statem ent
The following persons
are doing bllslness as
· Fast Track F11ness. 217
Gallery Way, Tustin, Call·
fom1a 92782
Klllly Scott Newton, 2l7
Gallery Way. Tustin, Call·
lornta 92782
This bustne1ts Is con·
oucteo by: an lndNldual
Have you staned doing
business yet? No
Kelly Scott Newton This su11eme11t was hied
with the County Clerk ol
Orange County on 7-29·99
19996800790
Dally P11ol Aug 215, Sept.
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th821
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as·
ln1erfianoe Capital, 151
Kalmus Dr , Solle K-2,
Coa& Mesa, CA 92626
CCU Group, Inc .. (CA),
151 Kalmus Dr , Suite K·2,
Costa Mesa. CA ,92626
This business is con·
ducted by a corporation
Have yoo started doing
business yet? Vas,
1/30,l\995
CCU Group, tnc , Gloria
Kamph/President & CEO
This sta1eme111 was tiled
with the County Cieri< ol
Orange County on 8-24·99
19996803264
DaHy Piiot Aug. 26, Sept
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th822
Fletltlous Business
Name Statement
The ro11ow1ng persons
are doing business as.
Goapply mortgage.com,
330 W. Bay St. #180,
Costa Mesa California
92627
Goapply.com 1nsurarl08
services. Inc. (CA). 330 W.
Bay St , #180, Costa Mesa,
Calllom1a 92627
This' business Is oon·
ducted by a corporation
Have you started dolng
business yet? No
Goapply com insurance
services, Inc., Richard A
GartreU. Chief Fin Otlk:er
This statement was filed
with the County Clerk of
Orange County on 8· 16·99
19996802468
Dt11ly Pilot Sept. 2, 9. 16,
23, 1999 Th823
Fictitious BuslneH
Name Statement
The IOllOWlng pefS()r\S
are do4ng bUs1ness es a) Gol2GetaLoan oom. b)
Wholoan1YouBaby oom,
118 E Buy Ave., Newport Beach, CA 92661
Jonathan O'Donnell, 118 E. Bay Ave , Newporl
Beach, CA 92661
This business Is con
cJucted by: an lndMClual
Have you atarted doing
business yat? No
Jonathan O'Donnell
This statement was filed
w1111 <he County Cieri! of Orange County on 8 31·99
19996803981
Datly Pilot Sfipt 2, .9. 16,
23, 1999 Th824
Flctltlout ButlneH
Name St•tement
The lolloWlng persona
ere dOlf!Q QuilnHs as;
Side Street Coter1no end Cele 1199 NawPott Blvu ,
•At06, Costa MeJa, ca :l627
0e8(1bftts lnCOtf)Orateu.
!On ), 1799 Newport a1v0 ,
Costa M aa, Ca 92G27
l htl bU$Jf1818 la COO•
uuC1etl by' ll oorJ>Qrallon
Have vou 11aned dolnO
bu'inen ~ot1Yet,1 •1•K
Oee<lbNI• tncor~'819CI.'
Diano Harmon, P'"idenl nit atatlllfnertt wae ti11CI
with the County Clerk of
Or11npe County on 8 '31 •"9
1ttMI03•a 011~ Pilot Sept ~.I. US
7.3, tm Th825 FldhlOua 8uilne11 N•m•l~t
Tl'4t rotloWing persons
are doing walneu 11
Weflneu t>y Dt1;1gn Pl 2694 Newport DMi .. &Jiit
l091. COsta Mna CA
126;:7
AaeM• J l•Londe,. eefl• N~n BMI Bult•
I 09 CMlll MHll CA m2'1 lntl bUtmttl ts o:in-CMtea by an lnOl\lldlili He'4 ya\I ... ~ ctolr!Q
bu&iMaa ~17 Yff, 9+98
Redlna J Lal.onoe Thie et11emen1 w11 hied
wtth the County Cieri< ol
01ange County on 8·31·99
18"6803972
Da11Y Piiot Sept. 2, 9, 16~ 23, 1999 Th82o
Flc1iit0ua Bualnn•
Names-.tement
Tt1e lol\oWlng pefSOOS
ate domg business as
C v. Vates Ast<>Clates.
1n Rlvetskle Ave .. #1053.
Newport Beaott, CA 92863
Carlos Valenzuela, Jr •
177 Riverside Ave , f,1053.
Newport Bear.h, CA 92663
This busl11&as la con·
ducted by. an 1ndtvklua1
Have you 5tarted domg business yet? Vas. 111/99
canos Vatenzueta. Jr
This statement was ltled
wlth the County Clerk of
Orange County on 8-31•99
19986803958
Dally Pilot Sept 2. 9, 16,
23, 1~9 Th827
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The lollOWlng persons
are doing business as
Ari Judice Family
Billiards, 518 W 19th
Street, Costa Mesa, CA
92627
Art Judice Faimlly
Bllhards, Inc .. (NV), 518 W.
19th Street. Costa Mesa1 CA 926Z7
This buslness Is con,
ducted by. a corporation
Have you started dolno
busl11ess yet? No
Art Judice Family
B1lllards. Inc., Anhur
Judice, President
This staternent was filed
with Iha County Clerk of
Orange County on 8·24-99
19996803263
Dalty PllOI Atlg. 26. Sept.
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th815
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
T,he followlng persons
are doing busl11ess as. ~ P&A lnternaUonal,
b Development. 1778
onrovla Ave , Costa
Mesa, Ca 92627
Stuart Gaddis, 339 Cher-
rvtree l n , Newport Beach. Ca 92660 .
Andrew Cra11e, 512
Tustin Ave.. Newport Be~. Ca 92627
Philip um, 512 Tusltn
Ave., Newport Beach Ca,
92627
ms business 1s con-
ducted by· a hm1tao
partnership
Have you started doing
business yet? No
Stuart Gaddis
This stateme111 was tiled
With the County Clerk of
Orange County on 8·24·99 19996803268
OaOy Pilot Aug 26, Sept.
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th816
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as
COMPANY GEAR, 2151
Orange Ave., #H, Costa
Mesa, CA 92627
V111lan Louise S1moo1s,
2151 Orange Ave . #H,
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
This business ls con·
oucteo by. an lndlvldual
Have yau started doing
business yet? No
Vlv1an Louise Simonis
This statement was !tied with the County Clerk of
Orange County on 8·24·99
tt996803259
OallY PllOI Aug. 26. Sept
2, 9, 16, ·1999 Th817
Fictltlous Business
Name S1atement
The following persons
are doing b\.lslness as:
STREETSKATE, 321
Ogle. Unit A, Costa Mesa.
Callfomla 92627
Jann Van Hamersveld.
321 OQle, Apt A. Costa
Mesa. CaHlomla 92627
This business 1s con·
ducted by: an Individual
Have you staned doing
buslfless yet? No
Jann Clay
Van Hamersveld
This statement was tiled
with the County Clerk of
Orange C~nlY-on 8·24·99
1"96803258
Dally Ptlot Aug. 26, Sept
2. 9, f6, 1999 Th818
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The tot1ow1ng persons
are doing business as·
WILSON COFFEE
ROASTING t760
Monrovia Ave., Ste 85,
Costa Mesa. CA 92627
Anlhony P WllSon, 1560
Orange Ave .. Costa Mesa,
CA 92627
'Dawne Barise. 11
1Sundanoo Ave • NewPQrt
Beach, CA 92663
Thts business Is oon·
ducted by a general
parlnersl'lip
Have you started doing
business yel? Yes,
January 1998
Anthony P Wilson
This statement was flied
with the County Clerk ol
Orange County on 8-24 99
10996803257
Daily P1lor Aug. 26, Sept. 2. 9. f6. 1999 Th819
Fictitious Buelneaa
Name Statement
The foltowtng persons
are doing buslnais a•
Sooth Coa.t Golf, 1684
WUller Ava , Space 42,
Costa Mesa, Calllorrtla
92627
Marte Kendrtcl(, t684 Wit·
t11r Ave., Space 42, Cosl.l Mesa, Cahlom1a 92627
JOhn Archer, 4223 Dana
Rd , Newpon Beaeh, C811·
tomi• 92063
This busmen Is con·
ducted by a ~ne1aJ
parwershlp
Haw you tartod OOing
bus1n u yet? Vee, ON\71911
John l. Archer Thia statement w&a I led
With tho Cou11ty Cl 1k of
Orange Coun•,:.::.09 t 1U
D ly PitOt Aug '2151...Sept
2,9, te. 1909 1n820
Actltlou1 Bualneu
N•m. ltlrtement Tiie I~ porsons
art <'Oing Mtntn as ~Tne Sllnd S.rwr,
b a.no s.tv.r,
8all(tMM1r •
d e.ncis."'u com, I , OaUQl.l!rl Clrclt, A!llO
VlejO, CA 92658
Aoy8'1ttle. 16' ~ Cftt:M, AlllO Via19, CA
.92811 ~~£Old. ~~~11~
O!!cM. A.1'-o v• CA ~~I& CQf\• ducl9d w • genet'llf
p.11Ml'inlp
Have you •llrted doing ~yet? Vas. Ape~ 14, 1999
Roy BetUe
This statement was Med
With ~ Cou111y Clerf\ OI
Orange Counly on 8·2CNJ9 1"9M02t63
DaUy Pilot Aug 26, Sej)t
2, 9, 18, 1999 Th809
Ficddoua Bualnna
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as
Ltty's Beauty Salon,
2200 Harbor BIVd .. D·14<>,
Costa Mesa, Ca 92627
Leticia Pena Marcial.
2214 College Ave., Apt. 15,
Costa Mesa, Ca. 92627
Ths buslriess Is oon·
ducted by BQ h'ldlVldual
Have you started doing
business )'et? No
letlcfa Marcial
This s1a1ement was ftled
with the Countv Cler'k or
Orange County on 8·20·99
19996802955
DallY Piiot AC.lg. 26, Sept 2. 9, f6, 1999 Th81n
Fictitious Businesa
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as
AMAZfNGSURGERfES
COM, 1503 South Coast
Or., #111 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 ..
Ramun In<:., (CA). 1503
Sol.Ith Coast Drive, #111, Costa Mesa, CA 92626
This business is oon-
ducted by: a corporation
Have you started doing
business yet? No
Ramtin Inc , Fred Sahah,
President
Thls statement was hied wilfl the County Clerk ot
Orange County on 8·20·99
111996402952
Dally Pilot Aug 26, Sept
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th811
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are dolng business as.
SOLtC'S LLC, 307
Marine Ave.. Newport ee~~~·sctc~'.36<~A>. 307
Marine· Ave.. Newport
Beach. CA 92662
This bui;tness Is con·
oucted by: limited
Liability Co
Have you staned doing
business yet? Yes, 10+98
Sollc's LLC, Annette
Benabou. General
Manager
Thl6 statement was hied
wtlh !tie County Clerk. of
Orange County on 8·20-99
19996802953
Dally Pilot Aug 26, Sept
~ 9. 16, 1999 Th812
Flotttious Business
Name Statement
The following persons
are doi~ business as
Pac1!1C RV 1520
Ponderosa St . Costa
Mesa, Cali! 92626
Dale F Ware, 5879
Mountain Loop Trail,
Anaheim Hiiis, Ca. 92807 Thi$ business 1s con·
dueled by an Individual
Have yau started doing
business yet? No
Dale F.Ware
This statemerit was hied
with the County Clerk of
Orange County on 8·24·99
19996803265 Daily Pilot Aug 26, Sel)I
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th813
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The 10How1ng persons
are doing business es:
CVBERTEI< COLLEGE,
3400 Avenue ol The Arts,
Suite AflO. Cosla Mesa,
CA 92626
Cybenech College, Inc.,
(Cahfomla), 3400 Avenue
or The Arts. Sutte A110.
Costa Mesa CA 92626
This business Is con·
ducted by· a corPQraoon
Have you started doing
business yet? No
Cybertech College, Inc.
Greg Borell, VIC8 Presl·
dent ms statement was flied
with the County Clerk ol
Orange County on 8·24-99
19996803261
Daily Ptlot Aug 26, Sept.
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th814
Fictitious Buslnns
Name Statement
The following persons
are doing business as
TAM ELECTRIC. 285
Stng1ngwood Street, Unit
21 i._ Orange. Calttorma
921Ml9
Charles Anthony
Tamule\/ICtl, Jr 285 Smg-
lngwood Street. Umt 21.
Orange. CA 92869
This business is con·
ducted by. an tndlllidual
Have you &tarted ~ng
business yet? No
Charles A. Tamulev1ch, Jr.
This s1atemen1 was hied
with Iha County Clerk Of
Orange County on 8-23·99
19996803199
Dally Piiot Aug. 26, Sept.
2. 9, 16. 1999 Th797
Fictitious BuslneH
Name Statement
Tho IOllowtng persons a1e domg business as.
CO Business Cardz,
171'55 Ne'WhOpe St , Ste
C, Fountain Valley,
Colttorma "92108
Rosa M Ainslie, 297 Beverly St .. Laguna Beach,
Cahlom11 92851
Thi$ buslne6s is con·
dueled by en lnd1111du.tl
Have you started do<rig
bus1neu yet? No
Rosa Ainslie
Thts statement was hied
w11h the Covnty Clettr. OI
Otange County on 8 23-99 111996803191 Oa~y F>1101 Aug 26. Sept
2 9, I&, \999 Th798
Flctitlou1 Bualness
Name Statement
Tile lollow1ng per&ON
are ctoITTg bul1118P as
Rhmeslone Guy, 1610 M~i11ewood St • CQ\ta
Me!ia, Callfom PiB26
Mark RoryWe9n.11, 1810
Myrtlewooo SI., Costa
MeR& Caltlomi. 92626 Thi t>usnss It Oi:IO-
ctuciOC fly en lndl\/tdu&I
Havt you •IArted 00\ng bollna• yol? No
Malt Roly WegOM
Thit e11i.ment wu titod w\11'1 the Couhly Cle11i cf
Otange Cour11' on 8·2'1 89 I 9111103311
o.ity fllQt Aug 26;.. s.c>t 2,~ 1Ml)5 luatnMe .... ......,,._,
lht I~ pe!MWll .,. ~ bUlillMI ••
c,.nr1ne ConatM:tlon
COll'poyi UO 8 Palmer =t~i.~Cl!ll
it<Amntll'I p ffOC>enlul,
HO I f"ell!'ltr Str•el ea... ..... C.l1lor ii
IMU Thil W.11'18u 1 con
duded by en lndlVlcJual
till~ you 11.drt<ld dOlog
bu6AnetS yet? Yet 1 Q.1()4/1 IX/3
Kenneth P Frobeniu!l
TillS at.atement wat ltled
With the C01Jnty Clerk of
Oranoe County on 8·2•·Q9
1991N03295
Daily P1IOI AUQ 26, Sept
2. 9, 16. 1999 Th806
Fictitious Bu•f neH
Name St1tement
The loltewtng pet'$ons
are dOlng business as
Balboa Comf)OSlt.eS, 729
W 161h SI , Unit 8·1
Costa Me:;a CA 92627
Michael Benjamin
Palmer, 729 W t 6th St
Urnt B·l Cosla Mesa, CA
92627
.This business Iii ~on· ducted by an Individual
Have you started doing
business ye!? No
M ichael Benramin
Palmer
'This statement was filed
with the County Clerk ol
Orange Courlty on 8·20·99
. 1999680~58
Dally Pilot Aug 26, Sept
2. 9. 16, 1999 Th807
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The lollow1ng.--persons
are doing business as
Arehatd Hull ArchltoCI, · Inc, 415 c lmpenal Hwy,
La Habra, CA 90631
Clay, (Utah), 15935
Amber V11lley Drive, Whit·
tier, CA 90604
Tt!IS business IS COO·
duC1ed by a corporation
Have you starled dl>lng
business yet? Ves
July 1 1999
Clay Bryan D Hull. CEO
This statement was hied
with the County Cieri< of
Orange County on 8·20·99
19996802949
Dally Piiot Aug. 26,.Sepl
2, 9, 16, 1999 Th808
Fictitious Buslneaa
Name Statement
Tl'le lollow1ng persons are dotng business as
. Cas1agna Awnings 20
AshbrOOk. ITVtne Cahlom1a
92604
Peoro E Castagna, 20
AshbrOOll. Irvine Calilomia 92604 .
Jiii Sipple 5116
Seashore Or. Apt. A. New·
port Beaeh, CA 92663
This business 1s con·
ducted by a hmlted
partnership
Have yau staned dOlng business yet? No
Pedro E. Castagna
This statement was filed
w11h tne County Cieri< of
Orange CountY on 8·13·99
19996802275
Daily P1IOl Aug 19, 26,
Sept. 2 9, 1999 Th792
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The lollow1ng persons
are doing business as Longskate com, 760 W
17th St. 115 Costa Mesa,
CA 92627 -f'
A611e Sales LLC, (CA),
760 w 17th St lf5, Costa
Mesa. CA 92627 ThtS business IS COl1·
dudeU by L. 11T11ted L1ab1hty Co
Have you slatted doing
business yet? No
Rene Sales LLC. Rene
8NC&, Pres
This statement was tiled
w1lh the County Clerll ol
Orange County on 8·13·99
19996802258
Dally PtlOI Aug 19. 26.
Sepl 2. 9, 1999 Th793
Flctjtlou.s Buslnesa
Name Statement
The following person:r.
are dOing business as
SPECIAL OPERATIONS
GEAR. 25201 Cos1eau St ..
Laguna Hills. CA 92653
Richard Davis Amann,
25201 Costeau St •
Laguna Hills. CA 92653
James Irving Amann, 30
TradeWinds, Aliso ViejO,
CA 92656
This busmess 1s con-
ducted by. a general
par1nersh1p
Have you starled doing business yet? No
Richard Davis Amann
This statement was hied
with lhe County Cl9rk of
Orarige County on 8·13-99 19996802276
Daily Pilot Aug 19, 26.
Sept 2. 9. 1999 Th794
Fictitious Business
Name Statement
The tollowmg persons
are dOlog bus1nei.s as
Dita's Fan Club, 58
Calais Laguna Niguel, CA
92677
Heatnar ~weal 58
Calais Laqun;i N1qve1, CA
92677
This business 1s con·
dueled by· an mdt111dual
Have you started dOing
business yet? No
Heatner Sweet
This statement was tiled
'With the County Clerk al
Orange Cou111y on 8· 13·99
19996802257
Da~y PllOI Aug 19 26,
Sept 2 9 1999 Th795
NOTICE OF
APPLICATION TO
SELL ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES
Dale of F11tn11 Apptteatt0n
AUG 23.1999 To Whom II May Concern
CALIFORNIA REST AU·
RANT ENT€RPRISES
INC l$(81•) 8PPlving to 11\o
Department or Afeoholle
S.vtr Qe Control to en
alcoh<>ltc be~-.rages Rt
2101.01 Ma1t>o1 arvcs
Cost11 Mesa CA Q2626
For the I01low1ng tyPo ol
Ucerite. 41 ON SAL!:
BEER & WINE (PUBLIC
EA TING PLACE)
Pvbflsl'lea N wport 6ucn
Costa MeH Dally Plot
Augus.t 20, S.ptomb&r 2. a
1999 Th803
N EOF
APPLfCATION TO seu Al.COHOUC
BEVERAGES
Dat• of f' Ung Appllcatlon
06·AUO 1999 To Whom tt M11y concem.
l no Nlmf(sJ o1 thQ AWllalntf 1) IS/a,.
CALIFORNIA OOVNmv ~l'EINC
The appllc:ama ustecr
• ..,.,,. .,.. @rllYiiiQ '° ltMI D panmeni · Cif Alcoholic
S.V.111119 Control •o • lllCOltOl1C bltVtraQet a1
t870 HAA~ BLVD
A 200, COST A ...esA CA9~7
Fat !tit 1alll1Mng type °' Lk«iM 47 ON ALE Gr-NEAAl EATING Pl.ACE
P\lbl11btd ~BuchCotit Mal Dally Pllo:I "1iault 20. s.ri-mtJtr 2, fl IDOi T'*M
lhuridoy, Sopf*nber 9, 1999 Bl
Flctitloue BullMH Act1t1oua B~nn• w1u1 the County ~ ot
Name St.i.m.nt • N•m• siae..-.nt °'•'"'° CourJty on 8·'1·-M Tne tonowino fl81iOl\S ifti.l toUowlng pelllOnl ~IHllatAt
llltl doing tiu.iness as are d01t1g bur. neu u CJaU; Pllol Al.lg 19, 2e
DELCOURE'. CONSTAUC· STUDIO DESIGN ~ 2 9 Hl'J9 Ttl776
TION, IS55 Mesa Verde GROUP. 1620 Kant I.an&. Fialtl01,1a Bu1i,,..a
D1 • Costa Mesa, CA Ni;wpon Beach CA 112680 N•m• Sl.atemeftl
92626 Pen E WOOc11ng 1620 Paul EdWllrd OetQOU1e. Kent LaM. Ne wtiort TrMt tanowlng pelWJr\11 16~ Mesa Verde Or UL, Beach, CA 92660 are lkJlflg OU.S111e .. u
Costa Mesa, CA 92626 nus busineH 16 c:ot1• fREE RUSTY DEFENSE
T I FUND ena.o E. lridlan hi$ business s con ducted by an 1110111i<11ml Hllli Rd Ota!l"''. Calif ducted by an lndlvld~ Have you stanud UOillg 92869 .~
Have you started ng t>ur.mess yel7 No Kal"erlne Ornet11, business yet'? No Pem E Woort1~ H 1 R Paul Dek:oure This ilatemeni w;is hied 87 t 8 0 E Indian 11 s o •
This S1atement war. "'ed with the County Cl•r1< ot Orati9t1 Cahl. 92869
with the County Clerk ol Oran"" County on 8 t J·W Thct 1Juw1es~ Is con·
0 Cou a.17 99 ,,.~ d<JClerj tlV an lnd1vld0al ra11ge mv on.,,. • 1911968022n Have you ~taned doing 1"996a02504 O&lly P1101 Aug 19, 26 bUSlrleSS yet? No Daily Pilot Aug HI, 26 Sepl 1 9. 1999 Tt\789 Ka1he11ne Ornelas
Sept 2. 9, 1999 Th785 Fictitious Busineaa Th11 s1a1emen1 was fllecJ
FlctltJous Bualnesa Name Statement with me County Cieri! of
Name Statement The 1011ow1ng p11rsons Orange County on 6·17·99
The IOllowing peraons a.re do1119 but.111esi. a~ _ 19996802505
are dolnQ bUstness as Newporl Mesa BaUtit Dally Piiot Aug 19, 26.
ROSE S NAILS SALQN 2790 Harbor Blvd • COslll. Sepl 2 "T.'"TW9' "Thn9
1918 Hart>Or Boulevarn Mesa. CA 92626 • Fictitious BuslneH
Costa Mesa, California Stera V1or1ca, ii 1G Name Statement 9~:Ji Viet Hoang. 1918 ~=n Srar '"' r.,,.-·CA T~ toltoiNing persons
HarbOr Boulevard, Costa 'Thii. busm~s 1~' CClr1· are doin~ ~s1ness as
Mesa, 'Cahlom1a 92627 ducted by· an md1v1dua1 ~~~~ TC~~i?1 1 099 Julie Cao. 1918 Harl>ol Ha\le you starteo dO>ng BQuleyard, Costa Mesa, bus1nes5yet? ves 4·1S·"49 6ayside Onve Ne'Wpon
Cat1lom1a 92627 Stoia Ylonca Beac11 CA 92f)QO
This business is con· Th late I I ed I Newport Beacn Yaeht
dueled by a general with 1~t! C:::,~~ c~1~1 of Club. LLC (Cahlom1a),
corporallOO . Orange County on 6.13.99 109ll Bayside. l:>11Ye. New•
Have you started doing 19996802256 port Beacti, CA 9~660
business yet7 Yes, Daily Pilot Aug 19 26 This 1>us1ness IS con-7(~99 Sept 2 9 1999 Tll790 dude<l by: Limited p I VI I Hoa . . . liati1r11y Co J~k, 0 e Cao ng Fictitious Business Have you started doing
This statement was filed Name Statement business yet? No
WJlh the County Clerll ol The lollow1ng r•m;oos tJewpol\ Beach Yacht
Orange County on 8·17·99 are doing b\IStness .ts Clutl. LLC. Terrance
19996802507 a) BRANDON CODY Pti11ltps Member
Daily Pilot Aug t 9. 26 WU:NER CHARITABLE ThtS sratement was filed
Sep! 2. 9, 1999 Th786 FOUNDATION wllh lhe County Clerk ol
Fl ... ltio"s Businees bl F.O CU S FOft OUR Orange County oo 8-13·99 '"' .. CHILORENS ULTIMATE 19986802271 Name Statement SAFE'TV 2213 Am~ncan Dally Pilot Aug 19, 26.
The lollow1t1g persons #8, Costa Mesd CA 92627 Seri 2 9: 1999 Th780
are dojng business as. Pamela We1nste111, 2213
a) Muslcant Manage· Amenca11 •B Co<;liJ Me~a Fictitious Buslnua
menl. b) Mus1cant's CA 92627 Name Statement
Merchandise. Snacl<s and Th•s tius•ne:.s is cor TM 10110.,.,ing persOOI
Arcade, 3742 Soult! Bristol ducted by an lncltvlllo.t are doing business as;
Street, Santa Ana, CA Have you S'l;Jned oo ng AIP Commercial
92704 business yet? No Bro~111age 2240 Urnve151ty
Larice Sandy Mustcant Pamela W& nstft n Dl'l'llt: su,1e 100. Newpon
1855 Sherlngton Place. Thi!> ~ta1emen1 was lilt>cJ a .. aeti CA 92660
M•102. Newport Beach wllh the Co11nty C:teri. 01 As..,oc1ateo Industrial
CA 92663 01ango Couniv Uf1 ·8 13 99 P·openies Int ·a Cahlor-
Th1s business 1r. con· 19996802274 ma Corp . (CA) 2240 U11l-
oucted by an 1no1v1dual Daily Pilot Aug 1<; ~f: vP.•s1tv Dnve. Suite 100,
Have you started doing Sept 2, 9. 1~~9 ·n7'91 Ni>~p<>n Beach CA 92660
business yet? Yes T111s. 1:>1.1s1ness 1s con·
l 111984 Fictitious Business ouc.ted bv a C011>0tallon
Lance S Mus1can1 Name Statement Have you started oo.ng
This statement was filed The follo'W•r>g per'loi" 1>us•nnss yet? Ves, 1969
wtlh the County ·clerk of are aomg bus111& .so~ Asi.oc1a.lad fndustnal
Orange County on 8·13·99 HYTER DEVELOPMENT Propett1ei. Inc, Donald W
· \9996802260 COMPANY, •001 Dove. G.,tmour, Pt~
Daily Piiot Aug 19, 26 Streel·290 Newpt> 1-:lfh·s. statement was hied
Sept 2. 9 1999 Th768 Beach, CA 92060 Wllh ltlll County Clerk ot
TS No.~Loan Leon M Hyter 310 0 1· I OtongeCour\tyort8·'7·99 No 030tSC3l0267058 NO-ch;ct, Corona dl:ll Mar CA 19996802506
TICE Of TRUSTEE'S SALE 92625 Daily Pilot Aug 19. 26.
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT ~ Ttus business 1!> con Sept 2 9 1!'199 Th7M
DER A DEED Of TRUST ducted ov an 1no•v•Oual Ha11e you started 001r g 0.0.TED 07/2711!al. util.ESS bus1nesi; vet' Ye& 1 ~;s
VOU TAl<E ~ TO Leon M H~er
PROTECT YOUR -PROP· Thts sra1ernari1 was tueo ER'TY, rT MAV BE SOLO AT A w•th the Cou11ty Cl(•fll 01
PIJBUC SALE. F YOU NEED Orange County on 8· I 7 ·9!1
N'4 ~TION Of nE 19996802503
NAT\RE OF THE PROCEEo. Daily" Pilot Aug 1 'J 26
NG NJ.AINST YOU, YOU Sep! 2 9. 1999 Tri781
SHOULD CONTACT A LAW· Fictitious Business
YER A ~ 8UCbon sale to Name Statement
the hiJlflelt bidder for cash, Tht. IOltuw•ng pers '"~
(mshiet's dlec:k(s} musl be are do.ng t>usin8$ ~"
made payebie to Nallonllll PAP s 607 A Eas1 Oefaull SeMcing Corponilhon), Balboa Blv!.1 New11or1
~ oo a me. or net!0081 Beach CA 92661
lllnlc. a ct-* cir-by a um ·Paul Francis Deiane,-°' federal credi UNOn, or a 607 A East Balboa Bivd .
c:I-* ~by a SI.Ille or lad-Newpo11 BeactJ. CA £12661
wetUW1g&andloanlllSllOC9· Patrick Scou. 1001
110n, -vi -'"°"· Of Asbury D1111e, Aurore, IL
Fictitious Business
Name Stat.ement
Tll1: low rg person•
a. re oo•ng l1JI~ r•i...:.s a6 PARAMOUNT JEWELRY.
306 E 20tn St . Costa
Mesa, ca11tom a 92627
Desi Rtr.hard Onega 306
E 2Qlh S1 Costa Mesa,
Cahtomta ~2627
Tl1IS tlv~ ru-ss IS CO(\•
.oude!.1 bV an 1ncJ1V1dua1
Have y0u started oo.ng
buw1e1>!'o y&I? No
Desi Ortegtl
Tn•s statement was filed
w1111 tne County Cieri< ot
Ora119e CountY on 8·17 .. 9 11)9968()2550
Da v Pilot Aug 18. 26.
Sept 2 9 19119 Th796
&ll'dnO' --IC)8Clled 11'1 6050A S«::ticn 51C12 d the F"inenc:.I Th•s business ts con· Fictitious Buslneaa
Code and aihortz8d to do ducteo bv· a general Name Statement
.__ • -t... ........... ii ...... partnership T"~ fo1•~w1ng persotU ....__ in •--· WI ... Have you staned doing ''"' "' held by ttl9 OtJtt.J ~ busmess yet? No are do.ng business a.
lrullee -$h(Mlll beloN, d an Paul F Delaney AMERfCA. AMERICA. """" lllle end 1n1era1 304 3JrrJ Slreet Newport • .,,... • ~ Tll1s sia1ement .... a.; hte!.1 Beach, CA 92663 ~IO and now tleld b\i the with the County C't>lk ef l<ay R. Oo'Wns Brov.n
ll'UUM In die herllinllfter <»-Orange Countv Of• I'.\ 17 99 304 3Jra Stref!t. Newport
9Cribed ptq>1tty under lllld 19986802510 Baaell, CA 926ti3
pursuant lo • Deed d Tn.111 Oa11y Ptlot Aug 19 2f Susan Brown Chnsuan·
delaibed beloW The sale.,,.. Sept 2, 9. 1999 Tn782 sen. 304 331d St1ee1. New
be made In en._•· oonditlon, Fictitious Business port Beacn CA 92663
bUI ~ COl90IVll OI Y!.81'· Name Statement W1lllam A erov.n. 30o4
IW'/l/j, 8llP 1 .°' lrflPloed, Ttle following p.irsons 33rd Street. Newpon ~ Cllle, po. •1 or are doing b\Js1nes~ as Beaeh CA 92663 ~· to pay tnel Cons1ruc1ton MaMge This. business 1s con·
"'"*1ll1U prindpel lllt'll d the meni and Design ~42 E'm· ductea by an unln·
nole(s) ..:llnld by Iha Deed of eison Stieat Co!>ta Mesa corpor8tad assoc1a11on TNll. Ml) ..._ and late Caltlornia 92t>27-2l12 otner than a partnersn1p
dwges thereon. es~ in fi<)ward G1 pl11 442 Em· Ha"e ~ou staned dOing
the nate(s). advanoa. under ersoo Strl!el co .. ta Mesa t.10~"'1"-' yel? No
the*"11 oflhe Deed of Trust, Cah!om1a 92627·2112 Kay A Brown
.,.... lhelw::ln, '-, c:narg. Thi~ t>uo;1ness 1s con-tnis sta1eme11t W&$ llled
Ind ....-of the TNllM cJuaeo bV an nu1v1t1u1l "' h me County Clert.. of
for the Iola! amount (el the 11me Have you r;taned oo.~ Orar!Qll CWnrv oo 8· t 7 ·99
of the initial publlc:ation of the business yet'I Vas 8. 16-" o .. tv Pilot ~~~~; Notice o1 Sale) rwo'rlfl:l'(I HO'W11ro G• om
llllir'nll8Ct lo be eel fatth bebY ;:lh~1s:;s::ta:;t::;em;::en:;t;:;11o:;a::::;=:~;;St':l!l..:::2:::;11:;. ;:;'fl9;;;:~=;:;T;:;h;:;7:8~7
The trnOUrt mtiv be gr9ller on
11w fW( ol ule Tnmor RIMS
l<REGZDE, ~ l.HMRRlED
MAN Dul'y ApposUd TNiUM
NATIONAL DEFAUl. T
S6RVICING COAPOAATION
R9carded 07/3'1f19'le -lnlb'mWll No. t~731 1
of Oll'icilll ~ In the oKioe
d IN RloOlder of 'ORANGE ec.nv. c..om.. Dille of s. OS.16'111&9 • 10«) ~
Pa.18 ol s.le: N THE FRONT
OF TtE F\AGPOl.ES AT THE MAN ENT'RV ME.A Ti
n£ PLJCEN"M CIVIC
TER. «l1-4H E a.t.t.PMAN
AVE.,~
Mlourl d l.l1paid lllllnce
ollw ~ $35.132 )1 strM~or~
mon~d1911
«tv 1135 GOVE"
STREET, COSTA M:SA. CA ~1 A.P N .Ql..Q'-33 The
undeftO*l-'r NAiii dmdiainlS
lll1Y ~ .. ""' ~neeaoltiltttt.lt .... llfld
other ocmrnon ~. • env.lhcMn~ rnoU8ell
..--ot mi. oomrnon d!ilVilllOI• .. ~.
11C1191olht~dltie
PRlf*IV rrwr be ~ ur ~e~l9QIMllO ..
..... ., Vllhn 10 ~ d
"" .. of ""' ~ cl '* NclCe ol s.ie. 0.: ... 8' NATllONAL CUAl .. U
$EIMCN> OCNIORATICN 3030 N CEHnW. Al/fNU!,
STE 2SO PH001X.. ,t;t._
ll50t2 w. Line (71<C)296.
91112 SNI <WnN!R
TRUS1e SALO~
OPP3
A
G
Rate., and drudJi11t'l a rf !Subje('t to changr
• witboul 11otkt'. Tht puhli her re erves tlw
right to ren~r. redui,slfy. N'\'i <' or rej1•ct
&ll)' da ified ud' t"rti rment. Plen:,e report
any error that mny b<' in your clns!>ifird ad
" immediat<'ly. Th<· Daily Pilot IH't'<'pts 110
liability for uny rm )r in qn ad\'ertt!)t•mrnt
for whi ch it may be re1'pom;ible f!'l r rpt for
th«> to .. t of the :.part llctuull> occupied by
the error. Cr{)dit can oulr be nflowed for the
first imflnio11 ·,
---.. , . ' , JI .
..... l --
1 ~ ',
I
G:t
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All rt1I ...... 1'"'1bl•t It ....
....._,,_, la ..-i.ct It IN fff·
trtl hff Hftslllt Acl 111111 n
1•11••• wllfclt 111an II lllttal
It tfHftlH "HJ '"llltlet,
ll1111ltllt1 tr •11crl•l11llt1
..... H IHI, ""'· rtfft ...
111, .,.,leaf. f1mlt111 ltltwt "
•'"-till '""' " ........... tt Mitt HJ HCll •1tlt1Hct.
lllllllalltl • •ticr1Wll'111111 •
U la 11w1'''" wlll ul
l:-1 .. ly """ .. , •'"1tll•· NII ltr IHI Hlllt wMdl II Ill
~tlalltl II lllt ltw Ollf 111f t11
trt lltrt llJ l1l111111f 11111 tll
••1111111 dnrllHf II 11111
....,.,., llt Hlllllllt II ti
,.rtl '"""'"' llHb. Tt Ctfll "81• ti flsul1111Mttt11. ctll MUO
Tt1M111 ti 1'1tl·424·15" ft1
"' Wtalll•f111. oc "" , ..... call HUO ti 421-JSOI.
SOLDll
Showc11t Hom11 for
Salt In our Saturd1y Rt1I
e.tatt Suppltmtntl
Homes of the Week Dl.scllaY Ads Sla/1 81 Just S75t DNdlrlt ta T uetdly al SPM
Open House IJsbngS s 151
Oeadlna Thursday 5PM It P1y1 to AdvtrtlH
In the Beat LOCll
-Rt1I E1t1tt Section
CALL TOOAYll
LISA K. RIVERA
949-574-4252
ANNE WILLEY
~9-574-42-49
.. 5 HOUSES/CONDOS FOR SALE
BALBOA PENN
E SIDE JEWEL OPEN AU-SAT t -4
232 E 21ST ST
4t>r 2be spec rvrm bHu
decOf llndlc mod kllc.
• "'6911 Ja:kit Giiis Rtr al
llct MH3HI011
E aide COSTA MESA
, OPEN FRIDAY 10-2 , 2n Flower (2 on 1 lotl)
3bt 2llt llllln hit w/rwtr J)llnl • & cerpel. fWltll t.nl I I 1 bl,
' 1 bl wNnll llllY lard Miii! CardllUCd RE M 720-t 780 :!f .!,.Mvtew Perk; 2 atory ,. me, 2 l'llltr br, 2.5bl,
13:25 ••• pool, ..,.. ~2 1111 . "°"' betcfl 121
• ly °"'* .... 74·1$12
• ESiD£ ™a.tom OlllCll90 2·SIOIY. bull In '92 38t 2.58e. $334.000 Ell1 l
..vtv T~. Af ~9-&42-4722
.. .. .. pool. spa. hll'dWOOd
lootl. Aeclad II> $311,000 Craig O'Rourllt, Agent
31().ft .. 712'. 310-3,...71
• Exl 1111
IOI • 216
32 HOUSES/CONOOS FOR SALE NEWPORT BEACH
VINTAGE BEACH CLASSIC Huge patio entry under IWlvtno j)lllns Wood floors, v"'1ecf ctlingl end etllCkllng
httplact greel your entry
Optn lloofs plan features
sp.clous kllchen. Mlg and
IOtT!\11 cl'*1g rooms
Stplratt t~ room leadng
to pnvalt en4rlnce 10 Bedroom
$Uile$ This Is II brand new
ISllng and II belllblul
Only $539,000 Prudef1lal C1 ;:;z:g.m.a 120
Wlifl PrlVllt BOai
Slip. Rtmodeted 2·story '81
381 • dtn. slab gr11111e coooter
IOPS. new Clthtlry. crown
rnolOllg, S 1.250.000 By Owner ~75~-8500x205, ~f()
JUST LISTED!!
BEST PRICED
OCEANFRONT
DUPLEX
$1,249,000
BALBOA NEWPORT
REALTY
949-723-4494
949-584-1101
l"'SELLER ANANCINGll
381 3611 remodeled & pvl rlWll estate near Back Bey, 5469K
l"'BEACH VALUE+ INCOME!
Ocean close 1111JlllX proYides
pot11M1 cash ttow $3691<.
Propeny House. 94~·3850
A Charmfni COuntry VIiia
Blutb expandtd ~ story,
261•28a Fp $404.000 Doug Butley BroM!I 94!1-721>-1704
BiGCYN ViWs
TOW'NHOME EXCELLENCE
BOfdetlog Big Cyn Golf
CourM. 2·3bls °'*1 Sun t~ FORD ROAD PAOPERTIES
94!1-759·7700
BAYCREST 4BR 4 year new Custom Home w/Dual Master
8(1 3cat Oil. S969.000 Keilll Rancle. Coast Newpon
Propenies 949-717-4n3
NEW USTIHO tt Canyon laltnd, $234,000
Buch Cotttge, $539,000
Oct•nfront Under $1.S Mii.
Prudential C. Rtahy
M9-723 .. 120
Newport Heijhta ~Mini·
Estate, sJngft stoiy, 58r 381.
3 Fp's. tpprOK 2300 sl on
pve~lzed lo!, 9522.sl beautiM
yerd very 1)11Yate & MCluded
se.49 .000 lg8l!I 714-813-4 705
41 HOUSESICONDOS FOR SALE
SANTAANA
TWO Roblnton Crusoe
Homt1H ODtr1 S•..SUn t ·5 3133ia-s1ta
2br 2be condo $146.100
1 br 1 be, den condo S115,IOO
Pull Kenyon A' 714-etM 074,• 'r1 4-:5 8393
,.
75 INCOUE PROPERTY NJITSSALE
•COSTA MESA• 2 aide by aide. 4 p1t111! Buy one or
both. JUlt 10% dwn. S37Slr
Wk. M. If 714-$7()..8213
80 COMMIRITAIL
ANDUST8ALE
Commerclll Storefront
Stal Beach • 212·A Mlln SL
1800 SQ.FT. Oood Location
Avtll Now. Clll Jim Kllltnln
HHIMIOO
I'°' ,.I "*'°"' Jtlf 2ba, "" J*f/
carpel. "";rt· no(ptllllllrilg $1800t\'no Nttr Otlctl ' bly AY .. IV1 MH50-W
1~--m1
•THE•
SHORES APTS
1 & 2 B R
TOWNHOMES
Starting 0
$1095/mo.
Mo TO Mo lease •
.. We are a pet"'
community.·
6 bfoeks
rrom the beaCh.
949·644·2611
... ... ..
By Fax
(949) 631-6594
ByPhone
{<>-t<>) 642-5678
By Mdtn Per8om
(Plr11'>t' i11C'(11~ \our 1111mr 1111,I
phottl' 1111rnbt-r ai1d 111' ll n1U 1011
bad, • i1h 8 prit't' q111111 )
330 West B~y Strrt'l Co~tn Mr.,u. CA 92627
. At \1·11pcin BhJ .!.c "'" • I.
Index
-• ,.....-TT~...,--
) ' ' I ~ ..
. .....~
~ LIVE IN LUXURY ~
',,,Yr", 1r /11/
APARTMENT HOMES
Exclusive Fashion Island Lifestyle
• Corcrerge Service
• 24 HR Fitness Center
• 24 HR Security Cate
•Clubhouse Facility
I Bed from S 1795 2 Bed from $2385
I Bed/den from S 1815 2 Bed/den from $2210
Washer/Dryer
Intrusion Alarms
Gourmet Kitchens
Elevator Access
Gas Fireplaces
9 Foot Ceilings
Condo Specs
Subterranean Parking
Custom Home Design Program Available
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
1-888-222-6924
Wooded Newport Luxury
Steps To Fashion Island
OCEAN BREEZES, CITY CONVENIENCES,
CORONA DEL MAR LOCATION & C
• Vaulted ceilings, frplcs • Heated Olympic Pool
• Country kitchens • Fabulous closets/storage
•Wooded landscaping• 11-acre nature park
• Walk to shops &-dining • J?ogs &-cats welcome
Select Location
1 Bedrooms fr.om $1140
2 Bedrooms from $1120
l Bedrooms from $1675·
THE BAYS
of N~rt &""1
MacArthur cf San f 041Juin Hills
1-888-219-0754
Irvine Apartment Communities
132 APTS NEWPORT BEACH
' OCEANAIOHT
ANO OCEAH ClOI!
1-ldnn Ulru Mdnn
SI00.-$4000.
Btu t4M42.-lt50
Condo 2000lf, OCMn YltW
2bt. Rlct1. 2be. ~ ., ... kit.
endoltd ~ ~pool,
$188()'MO ~9·262·1148
UdO '•' Hi Ht COri199 S220Cnilo.
3Bt :::J!'on1
OUw Lido tale HorN9 Avtll
111 Orunct; Aeallon
MM7H111
112 HOUSE$1CONDOS FOR ROO NEWPORT BEACH
Hltbor View Homt, 3br 2ba, rww ca.rpet. IJlllll & martM firs
Garoeoer Comm poo1 52650 94H45-&4t2 949-643-2541
BLUFFS 481 281. pool, NI Iii
kllctltn, tl/tplace, 2c gar11gt, trg patio, gretnbell, $2000lmo.
Av1lable 9115 949-e73-4242
28R 28A BXvf:'AoNt
CONDO. Available Oct 1 rncQhtf Of yeal1y. $2500/Mo
IMU.S-5000 EX1 126
1---=I
Mo1el
·coSTA MESA'
MOTOR INN
1 ST Wk SptclaJ
On All Rma $134.00
To. !Maw• 24-lwt
lronl desk. D 0. ptlonll.
fl• H80/ESPWDiK• loc c:hann. ~ lie. 0uMt iltnl Ntby
t:wys 405 ' 56 min ~ lrom OC F119ds
College. shop mall. bdW. re11 A IMITt>tr ol Cal'~
22n H"1>or M MH45-414<>
4a0·46•
1~Ra.am=]
Cotta Mtaa am11t office
~ lo rent Starting 1t S150.UOO Incl tll utll. ~..,
OCC, nJc. qu)ft loc. Lott Of
Pll'klng. 714-540-36'6
I ~ A1101a1isns I
100 people needed
we PIY you to looM
weight. Saft & n1tur1lly
Call881-28<M905 24 hr recorded mtsHgt
UOUIOATION SALE
Fri Onlyt
Sept 10, Upm On lift Pno10/G11phtcs 3303
HMlor BIYd UM E-6,
Cost• Mela. (Coml'tlta
Parlt 11 So Cotsl Of.)
Evtryllllng goesl 3(¥1
Equipment lor Pho4ogr• rhl. ponllng. olltCt &
much mort 714-5~
I 402LOST & FOUND I
FOUND fem11t mixed long
wttt h.alrtd dog. Vlclnty ol Rutgtrt I Wllaon. CM on e.2
94N4.M141 -
Found malt cat. long haiitd
Slmt1t colorlno, pink & pvr·
pit collar. Hurt. 714-53M4IO
H8 humane aocllty
German 11Mpherdt 1ound twn, btec:k I tan. akin to oc lhtll• 9-1·91 t801311
71442-2721
Lost Wedding Rln9
Enaagement Stt 1>ownlown H S 1n a/28 REWARD
7U 1413661
Gerege Salt Sal WI 1 711'11
EVERYTHING GOESlll
30 Yen • Aceum1lllllon
Alley of 412 ACKJ. CdM
HU9f Oaf'lgt Slit Sat Oll1y
7-3pm Furnllurt. clothing,
vldeOa, bOolts & much morel
4 t 5 38lh SI Newpol1 "land NP& s0Re:2 441 SANTA ANA AVE
I BROAD Lota ol loya, kid•
1tuffll
SAT 7em·ipm
Lots ol Batguu & Fumrturt'
2040 Placlntlt Avtnut
PlaClntlMVlc10fla
1 440 ~1
Hot Point W11h11 l
Dryer ,xlr1 cond S 175 for bolt! GE F~rMz• $75 Oklefe & Mamll A.not S65 GE ~ washer $30. PlllO FumrlUlt,
Clllllt 2 et.rs. T 1b1t SdO Odelle S2S t.4.Jc .,,. 080
Pit ... c.11 {!4t)ln-4•n
Rug h1211 wool
Wildt, ~ten. /Olt $150
231 Cllbnlo CM (G11191 Salt) , .. ~1
OOINQ OUT OF BUSINESS
afle. 30 yrs Clearaict Ille Ill
end ol Sep!. Bevtllv & Pll\nllr
Antiq\JeS 1800 W Coasl H~
Newport Sch 949·548·7187
I BOY Ail PIANOS!
Anliquls--Ouality lurnturt one P'te• or wllOle hOtlselonl
cast\ paJd 800-648..c922
WANTED gUEs
Monday ................. Friday 5:00pm
Tuesday .............. Monday S:OOpm
Wednesday ......... Tue day S:OOpm
11ours· Thuraday ....... Wc-dnesday 5:00pm
Tl'lephonr 8:30rui1-5:00pm
M1111d.11-Fndu1 Friday ............... Thursday S:OOpm
"'olk-Jn 8:30mn-'5:00pm
M1111d.11-F rid.11 Saturday ............... Friday .5:00pm
---...... ----.T"T~~ -..
··~~
' . ,...,._
. ' . . .. -. -...... ,...-._tc ----
1
1452 BICYCLES I
K2. MOUNTAIN BIKE. fuU
I Suep, XT Compt. Bontragw
whtet1, Ille 11nt cond. wtth tX1111 Sl50. 714-429-0755
1454 FURNmlRE r
!Illian IHlhlr aoht & '°"° Mat. new 11111 wrll>OM, wry
IOft, top qullrty. 'i/11 $2000 aacrib. suo. t49-H1-et33
14" iwa:::=I
TOP SS$/RECOROSl
Jazz, A & B. soU, Roclt etc SO'S & 90's
MIKE 949-645-7505
WANTED! Ol'O COINS! Gold, arm, Franklin mint
Slelllng ()Id Willc:fltl & jhalry
WESf"COAST COlN642·9441 l·10 mm=:I
Phlebotomy Course
Bos$oll Rted Co Cl1d Rig
•390t291 1-800-201-1141
your used vehicle
through classlfled
942·5878
CONSERVATION CAREBIS
Forest Rang11s. G e
Wardlns. Mai:nnance, .$
No exp ntCesMfY Now llt!Qg For lnlo cal ~2•97611
txt. 7816, 6lm-8pm 7 days
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GRAND OPENING I OPEN HOUSE RSVP
· September 10, 2:00 to 6:00 p.m. {949) 722-7715
arent Orientation at 6:00 p.m. (800) ABC-MATH
September 11, 10:00 am. to 3:00 p.m. braggyOearthlink.net
Parent Orientation at 11 :00 a.m.
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Have A
Ga.rage Sale!
Call The Pilot Classifieds at 64 2-567 8 .
to ploce your Garage Sole Ad ~ ·
;:·~1
~ tltOVIE TRIVIA•
:esEARCHERS, WORK OUT _. OF HOME. 714-5 .. 1201
~lonltt Pit fur Fhn111 ~lub In Howpon B11ch
ornlng1 end WMktnd1
Call MM424215
•RECEP110NISTISECTY• o.s 15 how '°' Newport ~ Conltnldlon Co. '1'. ~ Wed, Fri, 1:00-5:00. M•752.01M
.. RECREATIOH LEADER
~ ~ ~s II olllrlng pos1t1on~lor lghly vl1od at -no
ii CUllomot IWlOUS
11. twnlllP & WOlktnds
'for Info cel1 (IM9)644-4M4
• . W\,.-.q
' •• 4 ·, ,.,. .. ,·· .,,.
'
lmEMPLO~I
PM time
Driver Wanted
$9.22 por hour plus
mllo1go.
Hooded Mon thru SUn
2:45am to 5:45pm. Addf.
tlontl work m1y be avall·
Ible.
Must have tnick or Van,
ll1blllty Insurance with
proof or ~yments, driv·
en llcenM, social
MC11rity card, and clean
D.M.V. Drint out. Accepting 1ppllcetlons Mon to thru Fri from
8:00.m to 4:00pm.
PIOllO bring Ill required
Information.
Tlmos Orengo County
Attn: Pam Becklngham
2901 Gtrry Ave.
Santa Ana, C. 92704
714-649-8548 80().~
476 EMPl.OYMENT OWTYS
* PT
0
DEMONSnuTORS • WM8ncls ii gtoceiy 510rn ln
area. car necessaiy. must be
nea1. friendly wlsales ablklY
94M42-4213171 •n1 -6517
Pf( DRIVER NEEDED.
Honesl, reMable. 562-799-1874
HOUSE.KEEPER
Co1ona del Mer aanlor
couple seekS houMkeepei
catellker, ..... 111 pref'd Nici
seperate ~rs Must be
good Amencen cook No dlll·
drtn pelS, srnomg Of iQllol
MuS4 be clean, ll8il & good dnYel Our car Call Mr. Teylor dsy phol1t t4M44-4110
twalng IMl-675-7151
1212=-=J
ANDERSON Comttvcbon
lalgt Of Smll JoCls Ina' d u8440ns Local CdM
Est 1928 714-213-4723
LEWIS CONSTRUCTIOfi
Aenlodelng. ~ Uct 704 773 Local fttlldenl 714-557·St25
121
• --1 Computer S1rvtc11 for
Women. Tutonng .-.cl web
design Local 1el111nc1t
MMM-0032
11 .1 '01
8' O'AN.IS GOll£N
wtlft OIMll SHARIF
and TANNAH .-SCH HANDLE WITH CARE
Both \IUlncrable. Nonh de1ls. North's raise to four clu~. When you
ha\.e a high honor ma o;un 10 wl11~h
partner has jumP. hifted, It " mOle
important to show th.:u re turc th.in to
rebid a s"c-card suit of your own. A'>
a result, the excellent srund \lam \\a~
reached m short order. ·
NORTH
•AS ~ AJ 109 7 3
0 643
• A9 WEST •OJ1097
I:;> 1{852
O Vo'd
•7642
EAST
•K8642
OQ 4
O J8752
•5
Wess led the queen of 'radc~ und
13 tricks looked la}down. Hardly
batting an eyelid, dedarer won 1n
dummy and ra~ six club tricks. Ea't
defended bnlliantly by hang111g on to
all five dfamonds. Next came thl! occ
of diamonds, and West's spade di'·
card was the contract's death lnell.
Declarer could get 10 dummy w11h
the ace of hearts for a diamond
finesse, but that brou~t the trick
SOUTH
•3 ~ 6 •
o AKQ 109
• KQJ 1083
The bidding: NORTH .EAST
IQ PMI
4• Paa 5• ,..
p Pass
Opening leoo: ~en of •
total to only 12. 7 .
One disease that is rampant among
bnc.lie players is 'Oying fingers' -
playms too quickly before planning a
campaign. That cost North-South. a
bushel of points on this deal.
Although SOuth's jump 10 three
clubs leaves somelhtng to be desired,
why quarrel with success. Note
• True: the 5-0 diamond break wa.~
less than a 4 percent chance. but 1hen:
was no need to let 11 deleat the con·
tract. Had declarer taken tune at trick
one to study the po!>ition, 11 might
have been obvious Ihm 11 wai. nece •
sary to tackle diamond$ before· clubs
Now when the first roon<l of d1a·
s that East holds fi\e
u11, declarer can emulate
moods reveal
cards 111 the s
the Cheshire
faction. The
provide entn
diamond fin
cat and smile w11h saM-
aces of hearts and clubs
es 10 the table for two
in.
I~ ~1 _m_m_PL_i_V"_~-~-
tRltell Sella,t
PT tor chlld1W11 clot~ ltOl'e In OOM. Wida,
Some Slt'1 IMM73·2120
Mort= Loan Rep• Who ale & Retail
lolll 1~ w/experlence In Sub r1mt Loens A·D
But SIU conmstion nbentlits
Call Jolt! 714-143-9395
Httnllon 375
Gtnoral Offlct, fT ll1l/y ltYlll ~ sk~ls order dHk. • filing at 1e11Xtcl olflce
pt! 2085 ~Ill Aw. 15
Co1te .._. IMJ.442·1180
"Generel offlc:o"Gro11r1ng .,,.,.. co ,,.. bri!ttl. rell.blo
people, Otgarcltd = phone & CU$SOmlJ &lob. e
mtUe98 94&-675-0432
•GROOMER•
immediate op8IWlll IOf f:st ho&· pllll In Costa Mes. be
elqlt(d .-.cl love anma1s Clll IMH42·9142
tHai1m1i\i Cifii ~ Lead person FT 35~ ll per ¥111. SelN As$0cl81e PT
1S-20 hours~ weet< Newpolt Beech 9-631 ·8888
Cl'iild CWt needed 2 30-5 30
Mon-Fri $8·1~ IOI 2 cf'lil.
dltn, 10. 13 yrs Mua1 ltevt car, Ca dllYers le & ln5IJI Rtkabll,
Refs Meas 949·553-2549
t COUNTElt P~e
FulWert
tor "idomwl In NPB. CaM
111MM74-1llO
•Drye.__.*
Fronl counl• n9* &
W9lkendl a llQI Cll Shalon
IMM51·2032
fONORliSlNG OiieCfOA WotJt With School PT A's,
COIC'hll. 111Ct11ra, .-.cl ylMh ~lormoney 81~78H84e WWW~
UPSCALE TAHNING SALON
Seekklg fapclC llt>le. lnerdy
PlflOl'I to run Iron disk Call 94~75-3436
Retell Selol
ROGER'S GARDENS
i.s now twing f1T /fl '°' oor '99 holQay season
We are looking loi Itri
llllfglltC people who en-
JOY worl<ing With the pob-lte Please lax resume to
949'640-7528 or apply in
person 2301 SanJoeQuln
Hdls Road COM
S.IM/Aclvo!1l1ln9 Expending community
newspaper group seel<s
Inside ules tl!PS Phooe5
saiN expenence I ~ Great oppor1ln1y Base ..
comm1$$1on Phy11i:av
~ screrilg req , FH l'MUl'nl to .....,Dan .....
IMM31"51M
.£OE·
START YOUR
OWN BUSJNESSI S« your own schlcl'9 •.
Control your 011rn ,
income Sell from 'fOAJI
home, 11 WOOi. llVougll
lundrlisers Be at1 Avon
Representahve Cell
(888)561·2866
esses, and 13 tricks roll
476 EMPLOYMENT
OPPTYS
$$WORK AT HOME$$
Are you ctialned to you de$k?
We m1y have the key Call 24111 record mess 1~686-7418
471 EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
Pltllt be IWll(I U\lt 1ho
11811nga In thl1 category
mey nqun you to call•
900 number In which
theft " • ch•go ptf mln111e.
480 BUSINESS
OPPORTUNm.ES
P1t111 be wary of out of
•11 compet\Jn Chock With the local Be'ltlf Bu11ntu Bureeu btt«•
you Mnd eny m<>My or
I011 tor 1trvlc11. RHd
and und111t1nd en)
contrecta before you
elgn.
484 MONEY
TO LENO/WANTED
GOOD CREDIT·BAD CREDIT
NEED HELP ?
T.S.H. HELPS
CALL , .. q..766-16()5. ..
692 SUPSlDOCKS
1'!'00RJNGS
Udo llJe doct1I«181 bOltllo• Cm boet .-,prox 30-40l1 ~ "'!IX o1 1211 me =1 Side enciance. 111• 949-073. rn
-695 CARS/TRUCKS
.NAN&'S~
LEXUS ES300 '97
Calllorcurr~ LEXUS OF WE INS R
(714)112-no6
MIW uscli '• Wt;i;11n .. ..., " tr wMe11 iow"' lmrla:. $1 k OOwl'I M$Ullll
$10.950 pp ~9 973-0411
8UICK PMli( AVEHUE 195
hAo llr llhr llloy5 pwr l*O
(6 I 3952)Cal IOI QJffM pnono
LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER (714)192o690I
CheOll'Olel Blaur LS '15 •••
4dr, bl1tk toaoed. AJC,
S12.60011ade ok Pnv11e party
94H73-0411 F 0td A epltii ·95
Auto, AJC, 45mpg, 55k mile• SO down 111um1 $3950
private pll1y 949-673-0411.
F«d Bronco ii '86. 4 Wfie9i dI
auto, IC, 5311 ITV, 1 OWl'le(,' p$
pwr brakes, AMIFM Stereo
$4 500'obo 949-642-()189
FOAO ExPLORER XL T '93 i WO, White, fully loaded, 7311 ml, one oWl)el', well maln-teln.O, good condition.
19750/obo 1149-752-9425
LDUIUJOO'tl
Cal kif cur...-c ~ LEXUS 0# WHT-.STEJll
(7U)llMtM
lEXUI LMOO '90
811ddgrey, n9W til'H
IMMAC\JCAfEll , StJ.500.
PP 114-nS·2I02
LEXUS SC400 I 92
Call f<>f airren& P'ICWl!I LfXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(71')112.e906
LEXUS SC400 ·i3
Call tor current Pllcin!I LEXUS OF WESTMINSTI:R {714)H2-t806
Uncoln Conllnemal Merk v
'79 Gold lellher !I'll ctassr;, s"°"'room cond 1ecllced to $2595 obo ~MS0-281S
Mtcury Sable '80 4dr GS
AiJto. ar, pw Pl am tm cau,
Olig OWl'8f. goOd cond. lll1y new IHS $3950 &49-723-939?
Thuradoy, September 9, 1999 87
MwcedM lena JOOll .. ,
2d00ra 2IOPI.~
lnl. D 1111, 1-ownlf S29 000
IM9·76C>-1012 '94H«>-1661
lllaCEDH llHZ H .... WAGON• ...
1rnm1e. ....,._ .,,,, 1unn,
)td ..... •Int '°"41, hllft loedtd, 714-7~m «
c.11 ph. 71'-'73~1
NISSAN MAXIMA OXE ·93
Aulo. 11r p..r Okg. a"<>yi Bost
(4104nlC61 for currtnt pnong LEXUS OF WESTMINSTER
(714)192-690t
• NISSAN SENffiA XE 195 Au19, 4 door, AC, arn<fm
CHI, 481( h\J, $1400.
114M42 .....
Old11not>h1 clefe 111
Auto 6Cy1 M: .. pwi, •~Im CUS Wtll covers ·or19 OWtllK, very l'ltl SJ750 ~).642.264g
MMQE ROWllt ..
YI, Al"-· cc. .. --c.e ..... ~..!. ............ LOAOl.Dll _. CoM, ....
s.111 111,000/olto. ... ......
SATIMHSU'•
.Auto air, u piw= (395568!Clil lor COOWll LEXUS Of ft
71....a ...
TOYOTA CAMRY Lf ti Auto, u NI pc plk. nm
I 182145)Cel tor currltll pt1C1r1g
LEXUS OF WESTlllNS~lf •
(714 )112-ttOS
TOYOTA CAMRY Ct 'ii ·
AIM, 111 lull pwr palc, lnM
(t32848)Cal IC>f currenl o«:ioa LEXUS OF WESTMINS1JR-
(714)192-tl0$ •
D YES, SELL MY CAR
,
I
Run your ad in the
Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa Daily
Pilot and the
Huntington Beach-
Fountain Valley
Independent to
reach over 100,000
homes. Fax us this
form with your credit
Phooe l ~~~cmt_c.c1s __ o_MC_o_~ __ o_w._x ---'-11· t,:.
, card # or mail with
a check today!
Run for a week! If
your car does not
sell, we 'll run it for
another week FREEi
All for just $10 •.
. C.nril C..art N!nt« .
P1Nst Cttd Parti1ent &res I
..,.. __ .... ,. Moo..----'
D•~ o--a~,__ ........_ o..... o_._ a--n-..----1 o--o-"' -·D-c.-D•--tD"'" ·-.a~Da,,.... o*™-a--a,._ o_c... o,...,-
o~--oc:-o~ .. -a ... -a...,._ a-..--
• llOlor• I :::.:.::: '
·~
for all your needs ... ' •
a. AM1c1 .. • r ... i.,. •kiMdtr~ • a..wW•hi-U.. •i.p.&r•....,/SPA•
18/o.*'«l..b. . r-. NcwCliai11 •a...
FREE ESTIMATE (949 722 • 7478
--• • -. -! '7"
. . ·. ·.
I~ r1 __ ·_. ii'"_un ___ I
HOME IMPROVEMENTSll Dfywall • catplf'llJy • pa:r1'ng
Ind rrudl more• Smlll )Obi ok
GllY 949-645-5.m
All Tredeo Homo
'' J \,,. \ ',, '1~11 '''~"
PHEN+DIET
Complete Medial Proa s79/ Welahc Lou
-Me .............. rmprovemtnte a Atpetr1
81thlK1tch1n 1emod11tng,
PI08' 714-MS-20n. phone IAG RA '714-269-7185 OulCk response
• OfYW1ii ~fttlCtllft n .. ,..,..,,.,.. ••• Plll'll 1~. Wllpeptf 51~ ~,..,.. "'-""
ea. Bob 111f!>'~ 1 VISITI
HOME RESTOiiAfiON 800-7()()..8 REMOOEUNO t FftEE EST. l .. iiliiliillliliiiliilllili-.-..
AelO'Comm OlclcslF fllrCtlll ~~·.1·--=1
20~~~
MARK 949"'5MS25
hlill !Wid COiiiiilCiOf
~~.g~ I C.... Ktft MM42-1 T10
Ciin't ....,, to
get to .. thOM ,.,,..,,.
WQUndtM'*-?
i..ttMClllllllM ............... ,,
help )IO'.t ftnd ,....... ....
1318 LANDSCAPING I
SllANFS
~
I.an CQtf/SpM!ltn
T rtt ton/I iutaJ/atioti/kmou ,..
21 'iR~ AUTY PAJijfiffQ
TOOCHUPS JOO
N HOUO • Rdwd Sinor UHOM4 MMSMllJ
"lmTMDI ... .,, ... a-:aar-T-.
·lmllmll·liill
'll»ll•ll•ll• 141 . 141 -1111
Nelghborltood ,,,.,,,,,,.,. ,
~=
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work tor you.
AITyr,i tl._ ~ ....
• lni+-•Cr Jril
548-0769 -
•
" . . . . " .
• FULL LINE of NEW and CERTIFIED
RE-SALE VEHICLES
. 11 "GOLD KEY DELIVERY''. on all vehiCles •• ~.
includes 24-Hour Roadside Service
•·ST CKlQ PART> BOUTIQUE •••
Standard Accessories
...
11 COMPLIMENTARY SERVICE
SHUnLE ••• ·
I
includes Airport Orop-ofVPick-up (JWA)
11 COURTESY TRANSPORTATION CARS
II FREE SATURDAY CAR ·WASH
II COMPLIMENTARY COFFEE in our
.·comfortable Customer Lo .
DDEI ClERRRBC
1 9 9 9
FROM M.S.R.P.
1 9 9 9
$8000
"FOR THE GR
1 93 CADILLAC SEDAN Btu., 4.9 VB, good condition, new c:ar tradt~
NT
(768559)
1 9 9 9
After $21500 rebate
,988
2 to choose 723478 723319
1 9 9 9
••
After S4,000 rebate ,aa·a ·
310dloose 117260 116191 1181»4